Mike Yeo picked up the phone Thursday morning, heard Wild General Manager Chuck Fletcher's words and his head started "spinning."
"Is this really happening?" Yeo wondered.
After all, the Houston Aeros coach felt he had a phenomenal interview last week. But for six anxious, nailbiting days, Yeo heard nothing as bigger names such as Craig MacTavish and Ken Hitchcock floated around.
Yeo started to fret that maybe the no NHL-playing experience thing, the one-year-of-head-coaching experience thing, the glaring number of 37 (his age) thing -- that those factors outweighed his five years of assistant coaching experience with Pittsburgh, the Stanley Cup won there, the Aeros' run to the Calder Cup finals this year and his confident, convincing case to Fletcher that he was deserving to be the next Wild coach.
"In the days leading up to it, I think I got the job and didn't get the job about 76 times," Yeo said, laughing. "I kept changing my own mind. But when something like that [phone call] happens, it's life-changing.
"You can talk about my experience and all the other things about the journey to get here. But I can tell you one thing: I've worked my tail off to get here, and I'm very proud of the fact that I'm here."
Yeo may be only 37, but he started coaching at age 26 in Wilkes-Barre. He began his NHL coaching career at age 32. He never has been fired, and he helped guide five teams to Finals in 11 years. He worked hand in hand with Penguins stars Sidney Crosby, Evgeni Malkin and Jordan Staal, and he never was intimidated coaching such older vets as Bill Guerin, Gary Roberts, Mark Recchi and John LeClair.
"I like that you keep bringing up my age, because I don't feel 37 years old and no, I don't look 37 years old," kidded Yeo. "I've been coaching long enough -- it's like dog years: For every year of coaching, you add five years onto your life."