Don Lucia is one of the most successful college hockey coaches in history -- a victory away from 600, which could come as early as Friday night when the University of Minnesota plays the first of two games at Michigan Tech.
But victories didn't always come easy.
Lucia's career began 31 years ago with a short note from Ric Schafer: "Do you want to come to Alaska and help me?"
It was 1981, and Lucia had just graduated with a business finance degree from Notre Dame, where he lettered three times as a defenseman. He was drafted by the Philadelphia Flyers but was realistic about his NHL chances and was considering life as a stockbroker.
Schafer was trying to get the Alaska-Fairbanks program off the ground and coming off a miserable 1-23 season. In the years preceding, Schafer, a former Blake School and Notre Dame defenseman, was Lefty Smith's assistant with the Irish.
Schafer needed help in Fairbanks and instantly thought of Lucia, from northern Minnesota, for the same reason he recruited him to Notre Dame.
"He was just your basic all-round, good kid," Schafer recalls. "Everybody you talked to said, 'This kid is just primo,' and you saw that when you met him. So he was a perfect fit for what we wanted at Notre Dame, and it was the exact thing I needed in Fairbanks."
So in August, Lucia packed his boat-sized 1968 blue Chevy Caprice and began a 3,000-mile, six-day trek up the Alaska-Canadian Highway to Fairbanks. He pitched tents and camped along the way. Upon arriving in Fairbanks, he sold his car, moved into the dorms and became a graduate assistant/assistant rink manager for $3,000.