Scott Stevens, one of the best defensive defensemen of his day and certainly the most physically intimidating, is stepping out of the television studio to join the Wild as an assistant coach under Bruce Boudreau.
This is not Stevens' first foray into coaching.
The Hall of Fame player, who captained the New Jersey Devils to three Stanley Cup championships, was a Devils assistant and, in 2014-15, became co-coach with Adam Oates after former General Manager Lou Lamoriello fired Pete DeBoer.
"I love helping, I love teaching, I love talking hockey," said Stevens, an analyst for NHL Network. "I love to give whatever I've learned over the years playing the game. I love seeing players reach their potential and find consistency in their game. When you find that consistency and how to maintain that, that's when you become a great player. I had to learn that."
Stevens, 52, the fifth overall pick by the Washington Capitals in the 1982 draft, played 22 years for the Capitals, St. Louis Blues and Devils. A Norris Trophy finalist multiple times, Stevens was the 2000 Conn Smythe Trophy winner as playoff MVP and played in 13 All-Star Games.
He was one of the heaviest hitters of his era, and his knowledge of defense is unsurpassed.
His 1,635 career games are second all-time among defensemen — 16 games behind Hall of Famer Chris Chelios. Among blue-liners, his 908 points rank 12th, 2,785 penalty minutes rank fourth and his 3,240 shots rank 11th.
His plus-393 is tied for 13th all-time; he never had a minus season in his career. His 233 playoff games rank sixth all-time.