Regardless of the when, dad certainly is expected to be his first NHL coach, and with that comes its own set of circumstances that both Caleb and Manny say they are ready for and, in a way, have been preparing for over the past few years not ever thinking it would or could happen.
"Usually when I'm on the ice with him he's coach and he'll treat me like any other player," Caleb said. "I've had that experience and that ability to just have him be coach, take his advice and take his instruction. I think I've gotten quite good at it. Waking up early in the morning going to the rink and doing one-on-one skates with him, working on face-offs, skating, shooting, whatever it may be, I think I've learned to deal with him as coach a lot better than I did as a kid. I'm going to have to learn now how to deal with him as my head coach. I'm going to be able to be very professional and treat him like I would any other coach."
All of that speaks to Caleb's growth and maturity, Manny said.
"When he was younger, and he admits it, you don't want to hear from your dad," Manny said. "Hockey player or not, whatever, you don't listen to your dad, period. So, we went through that phase and as he got older and he started to realize, 'OK, he's not just dad, he does this professionally.' Then my opinions started to carry some weight. Now he understands there is some input there, there is some value in the information he has, and now he wants the coaching information. So, yeah, it's a very easy transition because he knows it's now business, you listen to your coach, you take what you will, you learn from the coach. He sees that side of it now."
To the point that Caleb has interrupted his dad when he sees him cutting video.
"I purposely try not to bring work home, and any time he has seen me on a computer cutting film he'll come ask, 'What do you see here? Why are you marking that?'" Manny said. "He wants information."