Team Canada’s coaching staff brings with it a winning pedigree to the 2016 World Cup of Hockey.

Among the five men are 2,411 National Hockey League victories, two Jack Adams Awards, three Olympic gold medals and five Stanley Cups.

At the helm is Toronto Maple Leafs coach Mike Babcock. In his first year with the Leafs and 13th in the NHL, Babcock is the only coach in history to have led his team to a Stanley Cup (2009 with the Detroit Red Wings), an Olympic gold (2010 in Vancouver and 2014 in Sochi) and a world championship (2004 in the Czech Republic). The 52 year-old native of Manitouwadge, Ontario also coached Canada to a gold medal at the 1997 World Junior Hockey Championships.

Babcock is joined by Chicago Blackhawks head coach Joel Quenneville. A 19-year coaching veteran with the St. Louis Blues, Colorado Avalanche and the Blackhawks, Quenneville is the third-winningest coach in NHL history with 761. He coached the Blackhawks to three Stanley Cup titles (2010, 2013 and 2015) and is only the second person to have played in 800 NHL games and coached 1000.

Boston Bruins coach Claude Julien again links up with Babcock after serving as an assistant coach on Canada’s gold-medal winning entry at the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi. The 2009 Jack Adams Award winner, Julien is in his 13th season behind an NHL bench, having spent time with the Montreal Canadiens, New Jersey Devils and the last eight seasons with the Bruins. He coached the Bruins to the 2011 Stanley Cup.

Barry Trotz was also an assistant on Canada’s Sochi entry. Trot is in his first season as bench boss of the Washington Capitals after serving as the Nashville Predators head coach since the club’s inception in 1998. The Dauphin, Manitoba native guided Canada to a bronze medal at the 2000 World Junior Hockey Championship, a year after being an assistant on the silver medal-winning Canadian entry. Trotz has served as an assistant coach on four world championship teams.

Carolina Hurricanes head coach Bill Peters has the least experience of the quintet, but does have involvement on the international level under his belt. In his second season as the Hurricanes bench boss after stints coaching in both the Western Hockey League and American Hockey League, Peters coached Canada to gold medal at the 2008 Under-18 Junior World Cup and was an assistant on Canada’s gold medal-winning entry at this past spring’s world championship in the Czech Republic.

Canada begins its World Cup schedule on September 17 against the Czech Republic in Group A round-robin play. The best-of-three final begins on September 27. All games will be played at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto.