Canadian ice hockey center and current coach, won Stanley Cup as player (2006) and coach (2022), known for leadership and two-way play excellence.
Rod Brind'Amour was born in Ottawa, Ontario in 1970. St. Louis Blues selected him ninth overall in the 1988 NHL Draft. His 21-season career produced 452 goals and 732 assists for 1,184 career points. He won the Stanley Cup with the Carolina Hurricanes in 2006 as the team's captain — scoring the Cup-winning goal. He won two Selke Trophies as the NHL's best defensive forward (2006, 2007). He was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 2021. His combination of offensive production — consistent 25-35 goal seasons for a decade — with elite defensive commitment was the model two-way centre of his era. He was noted for extraordinary fitness — his physical conditioning throughout his playing career was described by teammates as unprecedented. He became head coach of the Carolina Hurricanes in 2018 and in his first season led them to the conference finals, winning the Jack Adams Award as Coach of the Year. He completed the rare journey of captaining a championship team and then coaching the same franchise to renewed success.
Leading the Carolina Hurricanes as captain to their first and only Stanley Cup championship in 2006.
How They Played
Brind'Amour was renowned for his complete two-way game, combining offensive skill with exceptional defensive responsibility. He was an elite face-off specialist and penalty killer who could contribute offensively while never compromising his defensive duties. His relentless work ethic and conditioning were legendary, making him one of the most reliable and durable players of his era.
Lasting Impact
Brind'Amour is remembered as one of the premier two-way centers of his generation and remains the heart and soul of the Carolina Hurricanes organization both as a former captain and current head coach.
Career Honours
- Stanley Cup (2006)
- Selke Trophy 2x (2006,2007)
- Hall of Fame (2021)
| Team | Period | GP | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| St. Louis Blues | 1989–1991 | 78 | 8 |
| Philadelphia Flyers | 1991–2000 | 633 | 235 |
| Carolina Hurricanes | 2000–2010 | 694 | 174 |