Don Lucia could have looked back on his hockey accomplishments and rested on his two NCAA championships, seven Frozen Four appearances and 722 victories. Instead, the 61-year-old former Gophers men's hockey coach will be back working in college hockey, this time leading a conference.
The Central Collegiate Hockey Association (CCHA) on Wednesday announced that it has hired Lucia as its commissioner. The three-time national coach of the year will lead the seven teams that are leaving the WCHA after the upcoming season — Bemidji State, Minnesota State Mankato, Bowling Green, Ferris State, Lake Superior State, Michigan Tech and Northern Michigan — to start the resurrected CCHA in the 2021-22 season.
What lured Lucia back? He recalled his explanation to Morris Kurtz, the athletic consultant and organizer of the CCHA, who called in March to gauge Lucia's interest in the job.
"I said very simply, 'The game has been very good to me over the years.' … To me, I looked at it as a way to give back to the game," said Lucia, who stepped down as Gophers coach in 2018 after 19 seasons. "An old mentor of mine, [former Minnesota Duluth coach] Mike Sertich, said, 'We have to take care of the game.' That's one of my goals is to help take care of the game of college hockey in these unique times."
Lucia, who served as a special assistant to Minnesota athletic director Mark Coyle for 14 months to complete his contract with the university, impressed the CCHA's search committee with his knowledge of the sport and stature in it.
"We were looking for a collaborative leader, one with national exposure and prominence," said Ferris State athletic director Perk Weisenburger, chairman of the search committee.
"Somebody who could hit the ground running and make an impact."
Bob Motzko, who succeeded Lucia as Gophers coach and served under him as an assistant, applauded the move.