Los Angeles Times

Jarmond is officially set with Bruins

Guerrero’s successor will be highest-paid athletic director at a Pac-12 public school.

- By Thuc Nhi Nguyen

UCLA officially announced Martin Jarmond as its next athletic director Tuesday and the former Boston College athletic director will take over in Westwood on or before July 1, when Dan Guerrero begins his retirement.

With a six-year contract worth $1.4 million per year on average plus incentives, Jarmond will be the highestpai­d athletic director at a public Pac-12 Conference school. Jarmond will receive $1.03 million with a one-time signing bonus of $339,900 during the first year of his contract. Guerrero’s base salary was $984,667 this year, with an additional $105,000 possible in performanc­e bonuses.

Jarmond, 39, who two years ago became the youngest athletic director at a Power Five conference school when he took over at Boston College, will be the first African American athletic director at UCLA, a school known for pioneers such as Jackie Robinson, Kenny Washington and Arthur Ashe.

“UCLA is an aspiration­al program in intercolle­giate athletics,” Jarmond said in a statement. “Steeped in history and success, the tradition of legends and barrier-breakers who call themselves Bruins is unmatched. … I will work tirelessly to ensure our studentath­letes, alumni and fans remain proud of UCLA Athletics.”

The search to replace Guerrero, who guided UCLA’s athletic department for 18 years through 32 NCAA championsh­ips and no major football bowl games, ramped up as the campus closed because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Final interviews were conducted virtually and Jarmond won the job over Nevada Las Vegas’ Desiree Reed-Francois, a former UCLA rower who was the other finalist before withdrawin­g from considerat­ion Friday. Jarmond will be the first UCLA athletic director without previous ties to the school.

“I am confident Martin will help UCLA carry on that storied tradition, with his exceptiona­l leadership, high integrity and excitement for our future,” Chancellor Gene Block said in a statement. “Even in challengin­g times like these, there is so much to look forward to and so much potential still to be unlocked for our program and within our student-athletes.”

Jarmond, a former two-time captain of the North Carolina Wilmington basketball team, was assistant athletic director for developmen­t and regional giving at Michigan State from 2003 to 2009 before working as the deputy director of athletics at Ohio State from 2009 to 2017.

At Boston College, where he was also the school’s first black athletic director, Jarmond helped launch a $150million fundraisin­g campaign that has reached $121 million.

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