Michigan names Domino's exec as athletic director
The University of Michigan is turning to former football player and
Domino's Pizza CEO David Brandon to lead its athletics program.
If approved by the Board of Regents later this month, Brandon
will take over as athletic director in March.
He replaces Bill Martin, who said last year he would retire.
Martin will serve as a special adviser to university President Mary
Sue Coleman until his retirement.
"It is my distinct honor and privilege to have this
opportunity to serve the university in yet another way," Brandon
said in a statement Tuesday. "My participation as a student-athlete
at U-M has made a profound impact on my life and career, and I
fully understand and respect the important role our athletic
programs play in helping to shape the culture and image of our
University community."
The university said Brandon will have a five-year contract.
Coleman said Brandon, 57, is the "ideal candidate" and will
carry on the university's "tradition of excellence."
Brandon begins his new job during a time of change for the
school's sports programs.
The football team will play this fall in a newly renovated
Michigan Stadium, and plans are under way to build a new basketball
practice facility next to Crisler Arena.
On the other hand, though, there are two issues that still
linger.
The school launched an internal investigation in August into
allegations that the football program regularly violated NCAA rules
limiting how much time players can spend on training and practice.
The athletic department also has to find enough well-heeled fans
and corporations in a tough economy to fill luxury boxes at the Big
House that cost as much as $85,000 per season.
Brandon has been chairman and chief executive of Ann
Arbor-based Domino's Pizza Inc. since 1999. He graduated from
Michigan in 1974, where he played football for the late coach Bo
Schembechler.
A past finance chairman of the Republican Party, he won a
seat in 1998 on the University of Michigan's Board of Regents and
was re-elected in 2006.
His grandfather and father, both farmers, were supervisors in
Washtenaw County's Salem Township. In 2005, he weighed a run for
the U.S. Senate seat held by Democrat Debbie Stabenow but decided
instead to seek re-election to the Board of Regents. Brandon also
headed Republican Dick DeVos' unsuccessful 2006 campaign to unseat
Democratic Gov. Jennifer Granholm.
Brandon previously was been chairman and CEO of Valassis
Communications Inc., a printing company whose advertising booklets
at the time were inserted into nearly 58 million newspapers a week
nationwide. Brandon spent 20 years at Valassis, including 10 as its
CEO.