Named director of athletics in March 2015, Bamford was given direct oversight of a 21-sport athletic department with 650 student-athletes, 175 employees and a $33m budget. In his first six months at UMass, Bamford generated interest and visibility for the athletics program by announcing the department would fund the
Cost of Attendance gap for its scholarship student-athletes. In addition, Bamford was initially lauded for his transparency and fan-friendly approach in interviews, on social media and in person. More recently, critics have questioned whether Bamford will ever be successful in his undertaking of bringing respectability to UMass football.
Calipari celebrations In December 2015, Bamford and his department came under fire in a column by
The Boston Globe columnist
Dan Shaugnessy for honoring former men's basketball coach
John Calipari with a fundraising event in Boston and a banner-raising ceremony in the
Mullins Center. However, after the two-day celebration, many sources concluded the events were a huge success for UMass in generating interest around a golden era of Minutemen basketball.
UMass in Football Bowl Subdivision Bamford has often answered questions about the football program's move from the
Football Championship Subdivision (FCS) to FBS and leaving the
Mid-American Conference for
FBS Independent status in 2016, a decision that was made in 2013. After only four years, The Boston Globe published an article on the University's lack of progress as a
Football Bowl Subdivision member school with Bamford saying, "I didn't come here to fail." Bamford has been widely recognized for his ability to schedule football opponents for UMass as they start independent status in 2016. When Bamford arrived at UMass in April 2015, the Minutemen had only one FBS home game scheduled for the 2016 season. By August, UMass announced 5 home games and in November the addition of a sixth home game (Boston College). Perhaps one of his greatest accomplishments is producing eight football games in eight years (from 2016-2024) with regional rivals
Boston College and
UConn. == References ==