It was July 21, 1997, and I was in a press box preparing to cover a San Diego Padres-Florida Marlins game when I got the call that Lindy Ruff, after a monthlong roller-coaster ride, finally got the job to replace Ted Nolan as the Buffalo Sabres' coach.
It was just a matter of time before Ruff, then an assistant coach with the Florida Panthers for four seasons, was snatched from head coach Doug MacLean, who guided the Panthers to the 1996 Stanley Cup Finals the summer before.
"This is a great break and an opportunity you don't get very often," MacLean told me that day. "He's a good hockey man, and they made the right choice. It's going to be a tough challenge for him, but a good challenge also."
MacLean was fired 23 games into that season. Ruff was fired Wednesday -- almost 16 years later.
To put that in perspective, the Panthers have had nine more coaches since MacLean was fired. There were 170 NHL coaching changes between Ruff's hiring and his firing.
They say coaches are hired to be fired, but it seemed Ruff would coach the Sabres forever.
"I never thought this day would come," Sabres captain Jason Pominville said Wednesday.
"You keep waiting for Lindy to come back," Thomas Vanek said after Thursday's morning skate.