Brad Marchand, Quinn Hughes, Adam Lowry and Brayden Schenn joined a small yet special fraternity this month when each was named captain of his NHL team.
Marchand, 35, was named captain of the Boston Bruins on Wednesday. Hughes, 23, was named Vancouver Canucks captain Sept. 11; Lowry, 30, was named captain of the Winnipeg Jets the following day; and Schenn, 32, was named St. Louis Blues captain Tuesday.
"This is a pretty special day," Schenn said. "Standing up here being the captain of the St. Louis Blues is something I'll remember forever."
Although the role is marked by a simple "C" on a player's jersey, there is nothing simple about the responsibility that comes with being captain.
Captains with several years of experience, and some with fewer years on the job, spoke with NHL.com at the NHL North American Player Media Tour this month about the responsibilities of the role and their tips for the new members of the group.
Jacob Trouba, who is entering his second season as captain of the New York Rangers, said that even though a player's role with the team changes when he becomes captain, the person cannot.
"The biggest thing is you don't need to reinvent yourself or try to be someone you are not. Everyone can see through someone who's not genuine," Trouba said. "So if you're trying to be fake or do things that that aren't you, that's not the way to lead, and guys will see right through that. So just being true to myself and being myself."
Anders Lee, who is entering his sixth season as captain of the New York Islanders, agreed, saying players need to stick with what got them the honor in the first place.
"Be themselves," Lee said. "Those guys are in those positions now for all the qualities that have gotten them there. So just enjoy it, be themselves and I think they'll be just fine."
Schenn seems to have already received that message.
"I don't think being the captain means you have to change much, you just be who you are," Schenn told the Blues website. "Just because I'm wearing a 'C' doesn't mean I have to become someone I'm not."
John Tavares, who preceded Lee as Islanders captain from 2013-18 and has been the captain of the Toronto Maple Leafs since Oct. 2, 2019, said it's a job that requires a lot of work, and some help from others.
"I always say, through my experience and that I would give anyone who's becoming a captain in really any sport, is you don't have all the answers," Tavares said. "You're not the one that has to feel like you have to figure it all out."
When Tavares was named Maple Leafs captain -- their first since Dion Phaneuf was traded to the Ottawa Senators on Feb. 9, 2016 -- the team also announced that Mitchell Marner, Auston Matthews and Morgan Rielly would be alternates, a role Tavares said is key to any captain.
"There's a lot of great leaders, a lot of great people in your locker room, on your team, and you really need to lean on that to get different perspectives, different opinions," Tavares said. "You know, there are multiple guys in our locker room that can be a captain, there's no doubt in my mind. So it would be stupid of me not to rely on them and have them help me, because I don't have all the answers and sometimes I need some help too.
"I don't want to call it delegating, [rather] relying on other people for their strengths and their views on things and just having a good perspective from different guys and different angles."
But what exactly is the role of a captain besides being a team's on-ice leader and its voice postgame? What goes on behind closed doors with no game, no fans, no media around?
"I guess things that people don't know about the role is there's a lot of logistics that go along with it, a lot of planning and stuff like that, which I obviously never would have expected," said Connor McDavid, who has been Edmonton Oilers captain since Oct. 5, 2016, when he was 19. "But day to day, I think you're always kind of just measuring the temperature in the room. You know, every day you're coming in and you're seeing where things are at and seeing if there's any way you can help or change it. That's kind of my day to day as a captain, just taking the temperature of the room."