"We had no streetlights," Babcock said. "And on quiet nights, when it was 40 below zero and the wind wasn't blowing, we'd ask to get some candles and put them on the chunks of snow that were our goalposts."
Babcock, a few years from turning into his teens, joined other hardy kids in the neighborhood for games that ended just short of frostbite.
"We were so far north that it was always dark," he said of Leaf Rapids, a speck on the map that's 600 miles north of Winnipeg. "Honest to God, we played so much road hockey. The sky … that street was lit by the stars and the moon. It was so cold that the sponge-rubber puck would turn to rock, but you had your snowmobile suit on so it didn't hurt as bad."
You will find no NHL coach who is closer to his roots or more attuned to hockey's history and its legends than Babcock. The 53-year-old native of Manitouwadge, Ontario, has embraced every facet of the game, from his minor-hockey days in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, to the captaincy of the McGill University Redmen in Montreal, from his humble start as a community college coach in Alberta, to his history-making achievements behind the benches of NHL, Olympic and IIHF World Championship teams.
He is hockey's only "Triple Gold" coach; winner of the Stanley Cup, Olympic gold (twice), and the Worlds. He's also led Canada to gold in the IIHF World Junior Championship and coached the University of Lethbridge (Alberta) to the Canadian university title, making it five diamond-studded rings in his trophy case.