A tough-minded defensive center, Fitzgerald was an integral part of the Preds' first four seasons, ever since he was signed by Nashville in 1998 and immediately named the team's first captain.
Way back then, Fitzgerald's two oldest sons - Ryan and Casey - were tiny tykes who ran around the Preds' dressing room, whacking balls of tape with sawed-off hockey sticks.
These days, Ryan (a fourth-round pick of the Bruins in 2013) is getting his first taste of professional hockey in the AHL, while Casey (a third-round pick of the Sabres in 2016) is readying for his third season at Boston College.
Fitzgerald set a gold standard for leadership during his tenure with the Predators, which came to an end in 2002 when he was traded to Chicago. Over the course of 17 NHL seasons, Fitzgerald would eventually play with seven teams, but recalls the time he spent in Nashville with special fondness.
"Nashville has a very unique place in my heart and in my family's heart because of what it allowed me in life," Fitzgerald said. "So now that I look back, yeah, there's a lot of pride when I watch them play and know that from the get-go, there was a game plan. That game-plan was to draft well, to accumulate draft picks and develop them well. Sometime, I plan on running my own team and I would do it the same way."
Fitzgerald, who works under former Predators Assistant General Manager Ray Shero in New Jersey, said he's also been impressed with Poile's big trades - like the one that brought first-line center Ryan Johansen to Nashville in exchange for defenseman Seth Jones.