After seven years in the spotlight, it's little wonder that Eric Kaler is craving a little quiet time in his lab.
He was, after all, an award-winning scientist long before he became president of the University of Minnesota in 2011.
And now, at 61, he's making plans to return to life as a professor when he wraps up his current tour of duty.
Yet Kaler insists he has no intention of coasting through his final year as head of Minnesota's flagship university. "I'm not going to limp out the door as a lame duck," he says. "I'm going to finish what's in front of me."
In his first in-depth interview since his surprise announcement, Kaler had no regrets about his decision to end his presidency next summer, a year before his contract would have expired in 2020.
"By the end of next year, I will have done everything that I can do," he said. "I could have marked time and finished out my contract year, but I decided to accelerate this and let a new person come and get on jump on it."
His plan, after stepping down next July, is to spend a year as president emeritus to help finish a $4 billion fundraising campaign that began early in his presidency and after a six-month sabbatical, become Professor Kaler again in January 2021.
After more than a decade as a university provost and president, Kaler jokes that he'll have to brush up on "some of my more rusty skills" before returning to the classroom. "That's why I'm taking a sabbatical."