Story Published:
Jun 5, 2008 at 4:31 PM EDT
Story Updated:
Jun 5, 2008 at 4:31 PM EDT
By
WTVH Sports
PROVIDENCE, R.I. (AP) - Mike Tranghese, who presided over the
Big East's expansion from a basketball conference to one of college
football's top-tier leagues, is leaving as commissioner next year.
The 64-year-old Tranghese, who became commissioner in 1990, said
Thursday he would step down at the end of next June while the
conference was enjoying unprecedented success. No successor has
been chosen.
"I'm a little Italian kid from Springfield, Mass., who couldn't
play. I was a manager," Tranghese said on a conference call. "And
I got to be commissioner of the Big East Conference for 19 years.
It's a fairy tale."
Under Tranghese, the Big East eventually expanded to 16 schools
to become the largest Division I-A conference in the nation, a move
that saved the league when it appeared football would break it
apart.
The league added five schools in 2005 following the high-profile
defections of Boston College, Miami and Virginia Tech - all
football powers - to the Atlantic Coast Conference. Tranghese said
the conference's ability to absorb those losses and remain intact
was his proudest memory as commissioner.
"The vast majority of people wrote us off for dead," Tranghese
said. "It was an interesting time, because I think you find out
who your friends are."
To replace the schools that left for the ACC, Tranghese brought
Cincinnati, Louisville and South Florida into the league, as well
as traditional basketball powers Marquette and DePaul, bringing
membership to the current 16.
Tranghese has been with the conference since it formed in 1979
and was its first full-time employee as an assistant commissioner.
The conference was largely known in its early years as a basketball
juggernaut, sending three schools - Villanova, St. John's and
Georgetown - to the 1985 Final Four, still the only time that has
happened.
But Tranghese, who was commissioner during the league's
inaugural football season in 1991, said he was pleased with the
recent success of Big East schools on the gridiron. The conference
now has an automatic BCS berth, and Tranghese said West Virginia's
win over Georgia in the 2006 Sugar Bowl was a defining moment in
his tenure.
"We're recruiting better than we ever recruited before,"
Tranghese said. "All eight of our schools feel that if they do
their jobs, they have the ability to win the league."
Syracuse basketball coach Jim Boeheim said Tranghese was crucial
to building the Big East and his loss is a "blow to the
conference." He said Tranghese will be difficult to replace.
"He's a close, close personal friend of mine and we've gone
through a lot together from the beginning of this thing until
now," Boeheim said, "and it will be hard to imagine the Big East
without Mike being there."
Before joining the Big East, Tranghese spent seven years as the
sports information director at Providence. He succeeded Dave Gavitt
as Big East commissioner in 1990. Both Gavitt and Tranghese made
sure the conference had contracts with national networks such as
CBS and ESPN, and Tranghese was the force behind the Big East
Television Network, one of the most successful regional deals.
Tranghese, who served five years on the NCAA's tournament
selection committee, said he wasn't sure of his future plans.
"I'm not sick. I haven't been forced out, and I'm not going to
take another job," he added.
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Associated Press Writer Michael Hill in Albany contributed to
this report.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)