"He just told us that Sam didn't know yet, but he was playing tonight. They wanted us to fly out to be there for him," Annick said.
After hanging up, she made calls to her husband, former NHLer Patrick, and Sam's siblings - brother Nicholas and sister Kathryn - to let them know they had to quickly pack their things and make a mad dash to the airport. And the family, complete with Kathryn's 14-month-old son Liam in tow, managed to board their flight on time despite the chaotic turnaround.
"We found out around 1:30, and we were on the plane at 3:30," Annick said. "We just had to carry on, and we're going back tomorrow."
Meanwhile, back in Calgary, Sam found out that he would be making his NHL debut against the Flames about an hour after his mother did. After getting called up from Wilkes-Barre/Scranton on Sunday, he got the call tonight with Jason Zucker joining Jake Guentzel and Teddy Blueger on the injury list.
"It was certainly crazy. Learned this afternoon, right before the team meetings," he said. "It was probably 12 [Mountain time, two hours behind Eastern time] when I learned it. So quick turn of events, but I was glad to be here for my first game."
With this being the second half of a back-to-back set, the Penguins didn't hold a morning skate. So Poulin didn't have the chance to work off any of his nerves, instead just getting a stretch in at the hotel before coming to the rink.
When the 21-year-old forward took the ice for the traditional solo rookie lap ahead of warmups, "my legs were shaking," Poulin admitted with a smile. "But it was a great moment, for sure."
His parents and siblings weren't able to witness that in person, as they missed the first hour or so of the game while traveling, with the flight connecting through Ottawa. But they followed along as best they could, landing around 7:30 PM and getting into a car service that took them straight to the loading dock at Scotiabank Saddledome.
"We got some WiFi on the plane, and friends from home were sending us some highlights and what was going on. Then on the ride from the airport to here, we had the game on our cell phones," Annick said.
They got to their seats at about 8 PM to see Sam living out the dream he's had ever since he was a little boy.
"He's worked so hard to get here," Annick said. "I was just saying to my daughter, when he was about 5 or 6 years old, he said, 'Mommy, one day I'll play in the NHL, and I'll play with Crosby and Ovechkin.' They were the two top players. Now, he is on the ice with them. Oh, it's just crazy. It's unreal."