Don Lucia determined it was time — time to move aside and let someone else take over.
On Tuesday, after 19 years, two national championships, 13 NCAA tournament appearances and a recent run of disappointing seasons, Lucia stepped down as Gophers men's hockey coach.
"I've always felt this is a great job, but somebody else should have an opportunity, too," Lucia said at an afternoon news conference with athletic director Mark Coyle by his side.
Lucia, who had one year remaining on his contract, will become a special assistant to Coyle through the end of next school year, when his hockey contract was set to expire. Lucia thanked Coyle for "allowing me to leave on my terms."
Lucia now will focus on fundraising for upgrades to 3M Arena at Mariucci. Lucia made $612,500 this season, and the final year of the contract will be restructured for his new role and reviewed by the Board of Regents, possibly later this week, according to a school spokesman.
The move comes two days after the Gophers did not make the NCAA tournament for the second time in three years. Lucia said his decision was not related to that disappointment and had been on his mind for a while.
"I was never one to say I'm going to coach until I was 65 or 70. I looked at probably around 60 was not a bad time," said Lucia, 59, the Gophers' winningest hockey coach with a 457-248-73 record. "… I knew pretty much the last month or two — even when things were going well, and we thought we'd be in the NCAA [tournament]."
Lucia informed his players at an early afternoon meeting that Coyle also attended.