Now that quality time will continue, as the organization now has two father-son duos. Dave Lowry is an assistant coach with the Jets as his son Adam starts his seventh NHL season.
The Dubois dynamic will be a bit different with Eric on the coaching staff of the Jets AHL affiliate.
"My job is to help the next generation of defencemen for the Jets," said Dubois. "After that, I'm a dad. If he needs to talk and he needs to reach me, I'm there for him. That's the boundary. I'll be a dad first. There is a great coaching staff with the Jets and I'll let them do their job."
When Pierre-Luc was younger, he and Eric spent a lot of time together watching video. It wasn't so much that Eric was trying to drill defensive positioning or the nuances of the game into his son.
Pierre-Luc was just incredibly curious.
"He's always been very passionate about the game," said Dubois, adding that his son attended a school roughly 400 metres away from the rink.
"Instead of going home for lunch, he'd prefer coming to the arena and have lunch with me," he said. "He'd ask questions about why I'm getting that clip for tomorrow for practice or video meetings? He had a lot of questions about those things. He picked up early on about having a good stick on the ice, reading plays, positioning yourself in the right place on the ice - in the offensive zone and defensive zone.
"It's not that I coached him, he just spent so much time around me early on."
He describes his son as an easygoing 22-year-old when off the ice, but extremely competitive on it.
"Especially when he was young, he was a bad loser," Dubois laughed. "People were amazed how intense and how he'd get in trouble in minor hockey for getting two or three minor penalties in a game. Then off the ice he's very quiet, very jovial."
When Pierre-Luc first spoke to reporters after the trade, he said every visit the Blue Jackets made to Winnipeg meant a visit at home for one of his mom's home cooked meals.
"I'm sorry guys, it's not mommy's cooking, it's daddy's cooking," Dubois said with a smile.
The city of Winnipeg certainly made an impression on the Dubois family. Eric and his wife live in the city full-time, and Pierre-Luc called the city "beautiful" after his experiences on those many bike rides.
It seems the Jets have already built on that impression.
"He's happy to play here," said Dubois of his son. "He had a great conversation with Paul (Maurice). He's excited. It's a new chapter for him."