Reid Amos brings an extensive background in administration and athletics to go with a sincere passion for the NCAA Division II experience as the Mountain East Conference commissioner.
Amos, the unanimous choice by the MEC Board of Directors in November 2012 to serve as commissioner, has helped direct the league to extreme heights in just a short amount of time with the MEC having earned a reputation as a regional and national power.
MEC Commissioner Reid Amos has witnessed 7 programs win
a national championship and 14 teams reach a national title game.
In virtually each of the 23 sports sponsored by the MEC, teams have reached new heights since associating with the conference. Since the conference began competing in 2013, seven teams have won team national championships and 14 teams have advanced to national finals. Additionally, 47 teams have won regional championships as MEC members. Wheeling’s volleyball national championship in 2015 was the first ever team NCAA championship for any league school in any sport.
Amos has also expanded the number of championships offered during his tenure. The MEC began with 16 championships in its first year, and then expanded to add women’s lacrosse and then used a strategic partnership with the Great Midwest Athletic Conference to add a championship in men’s and women’s swimming. In 2019, the MEC became the first NCAA conference in the country to conduct a championship in the sport of acrobatics and tumbling. A year later, the league added championships in wrestling and indoor track and field, giving the league a total of 23 championships -- among the most of any Division II league in the country. In September 2024, the MEC announced an innovative and strategic partnership with Dominican University of California, enabling the school to compete with the MEC in women's lacrosse.
In addition to his daily duties, Amos served as 2nd Vice President of Division II Conference Commissioners Association in 2023-24, and recently ascended to President of the Association for 2024-25.
Amos has consistently played a leading role within NCAA Division II sport and governance committees. He has served as chair of the NCAA Division II Football and Men's Golf committees and recently concluded a four-year term, including the final two as the chair of the NCAA Division II Championships Committee.
The committee is the primary oversight group responsible for administering policies and procedures surrounding the division’s 25 championships. The committee oversees the budget and conduct of these championships, as well as the qualification and selection procedures for each. All Division II sport committees report directly to the Championships Committee.
As chair of the Division II football committee, he helped oversee the bid process and site selection for the 2018 Division II Football Championship in McKinney, Texas.
Prior to his appointment as 2nd Vice President of D2 CCA in 2023-24, Amos had been active within the association as Chair of the Sport Administration and External Relations committees. He is additionally a member of the Conference Commissioner’s Officiating Steering Committee, which serves all three divisions.
Amos has also led efforts to land NCAA championships in the MEC’s footprint, as the MEC has hosted multiple national championships for softball, women’s lacrosse, and men’s golf.
Commissioner Amos has helped raise the visibility of the league and its institutions with the development of the MEC Digital Network and the creation of the Mountain East Conference Football “Game of the Week,” which has drawn thousands of online viewers since its inception. He also forged a partnership with WV MetroNews to deliver high-definition video streams on the web and provide radio coverage for football and basketball games across the region. In addition to multiple network-wide regular season basketball broadcasts, WV MetroNews provides live coverage of the MEC Basketball Tournament annually - including 18 high-definition video webcasts.
Prior to his role as commissioner, Amos was the Vice President of Broadcasting at West Liberty University. He was promoted to that role following a successful stint as the Executive Director for the WLU Office of Communications.
During his time at West Liberty, Amos’s work was instrumental in the growth of West Liberty University Television (WLTV-14), which today reaches more than 100,000 cable homes in West Virginia and Ohio. Known throughout the Upper Ohio Valley as the “Voice of the Hilltoppers,” he served as play-by-play announcer for approximately 50 televised football and basketball games each year at West Liberty.
Amos served as executive producer and play-by-play man on several WLTV telecasts that have aired on ROOT Sports, the regional cable sports network in Pittsburgh that reaches 2.5 million cable homes. He achieved a major coup when he successfully negotiated and coordinated the first-ever live telecast of the 2012 WVIAC Tournament’s men’s basketball championship game on ROOT Sports.
In addition to his experience as a member of the West Liberty University’s senior staff and broadcaster at West Liberty, Amos also has the benefit of being a successful collegiate coach and NCAA administrator.
He enjoyed a highly successful run as head men’s golf coach at Fairmont State University from 2003-07. A two-time WVIAC Coach of the Year and the 2007 NCAA Division II East Region Coach of the Year, Amos led the Falcons to a pair of WVIAC championships, five consecutive NCAA Division II regional tournament bids and the 2007 NCAA Division II East Region championship. His career coaching record at Fairmont State was a sparkling 450-215-7 (.677).
Amos additionally served on the Division II men's golf committee from 2009-13, chairing the committee during his final year.
Along with his work in broadcasting and athletics, Amos also brings extensive communications and marketing experience to the table. Since 2003, he has been the owner/operator of Intermedia Solutions, LLC, a multimedia consulting company working with many of the institutions he now serves in the MEC.
Amos was responsible for developing the largest Division II tournament radio network in the nation and has also worked as director of business development for an information technology government contractor as well as director of operations for a radio ownership group.
Amos cut his teeth in the broadcasting business during 13 years as Sports Director at WMMN-AM radio in Fairmont, W.Va., where he handled play-by-play duties for the football and basketball teams at Fairmont State. He began working at the station while still a student at FSU.
A Fairmont native and a graduate of Fairmont Senior High, Amos graduated from Fairmont State in 1994 with a B.A. in Speech Communication and earned his Master’s Degree in Communications from West Virginia University in 1996. He resides in Fairmont with his wife, Jennie, and their children, Elizabeth and Cate.