Lou Lamoriello is the only NHL general manager who doesn't even allow team broadcasters to fly on New Jersey's plane, so a father-son trip during Zach Parise's seven-year tenure with the Devils was obviously out of the question.
This season, the Wild didn't have what has fast become an NHL tradition — the father-son trip. But when Chuck Fletcher discovered that J.P. Parise, who played 14 years in the NHL, had never experienced life on the road with his famous son, the Wild GM offered the elder Parise his own personal father-son trip.
"I said, 'Oh yeah, I'm in,' " J.P. Parise said.
During the last three games of the Wild's four-game trip to St. Louis, Phoenix, Los Angeles and Chicago, J.P. Parise traveled with the Wild. He experienced life on the charter and the team hotel. He got to do team dinners and even take part in team meetings, such as the pregame penalty-kill assembly Monday in L.A.
Parise even offered the coaches this game plan for the Kings meeting: "Get ahead, stay ahead and don't tire."
What did J.P. learn about life on the road these days compared to yesteryear?
"Everything's the same as far as camaraderie and the fun. The owners just have more money," said J.P. Parise, 72, who never got to stay at Ritz-Carltons and JW Marriotts and never got to chow down on sushi and drink glasses of wine on flights. "I've been treated like a king.
"I remember when we used to go to Calgary when I played with the North Stars. Cliff Fletcher, Chuck's dad, was the [Calgary] GM and I was always so impressed with how welcoming that whole organization was, how nice they were to outsiders. Here, you can sense the same thing. It's so inviting, and it's not because I'm J.P. Parise or Zach's dad. It's just natural."