NORTHFIELD -- The office is 10 by 12 feet in size, large enough for a desk and a few chairs. Black paint on the walls — a nod to school colors — has faded to gray. A fresh coat is on the to-do list.
That list seems endless some days. The man responsible for every detail, whether critically important or merely cosmetic, is no stranger to overseeing successful hockey programs. Mike Eaves coached in the NHL and won a national championship as head coach at Wisconsin.
So what is he doing here, at age 60, coaching at tiny St. Olaf, a private liberal arts college known more for its music department than its hockey program?
"Everything came together here," he said. "It was almost a no-brainer."
Eaves refers to factors that steered him to Division III hockey as "tumblers."
The first came in March when he was fired by Wisconsin after 14 seasons. Eaves led the Badgers to the NCAA title in 2006 and runner-up finish in 2010, but a 12-45-13 combined record in his final two seasons prompted athletic director Barry Alvarez to make a change.
"We weren't putting butts in the seats, and it's a business," Eaves said. "Sometimes you just need a change. You need a different voice. You need a different energy."
His energy isn't a problem. Eaves, who played in the NHL for the North Stars and Calgary from 1978-86, still rises at 5 a.m. and bounces around the office with the gusto of an unpaid intern.