John Marinatto, ran Big East in time of tumult, dies at 64

Marinato was living in the Providence, Rhode Island, area at the time of his death

John Marinatto, the Big East commissioner during a tumultuous period of conference realignment across college sports, has died. He was 64.

Providence College, Marinatto's alma mater and the school where he began a long career in college sports, said he died Saturday. The cause was not disclosed.

Marinato was living in the Providence, Rhode Island, area at the time of his death.

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The Providence native began working in sports administration at his hometown school as a student in 1975 and was mentored by future Big East Conference commissioners Dave Gavitt and Mike Tranghese.

"In 48 years, we never exchanged a cross word," Tranghese said. "And I take no credit for that. It's hard to go through life and not have enemies. John Marinatto may be the only person I know who didn't have enemies. He was extremely well liked and well respected."

Marinatto rose from sports information director to athletic director at Providence and held that role for more than a decade before joining the Big East in 2002 as a senior associate commissioner.

"He loved working, but he loved being in the background," Tranghese said.

Tranghese credited Marinatto with being the architect of the Big East's reconstruction in the early 2000s after the first round of departures nearly wrecked the conference.

When Boston College, Virginia Tech and Miami left for the Atlantic Coast Conference, the Big East added Louisville, South Florida, DePaul, Cincinnati and Marquette.

The result was a super conference that became a powerhouse in basketball and still strong enough to be considered one of the top college football leagues.

Marinatto followed Tranghese and became the third Big East commissioner in 2009. Not long after, the conference started to splinter again and Marinatto was unable to hold it together.

"He carried that burden around with him the rest of his life," said former Big East Associate Commissioner Nick Carparelli, now the executive director of Bowl Season, an organization that promotes and supports postseason college football games.

Eventually, the basketball schools split from the football schools and took the name Big East. The football schools rebranded as the American Athletic Conference.

Marinatto resigned in May 2012.

Tranghese said Marinatto blamed himself for the Big East coming undone.

"I had many conversations with him because that was absolutely not the case," Tranghese said. "The deck was stacked. There were circumstances totally out of his control."

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Marinatto became somewhat reclusive. Even many of his close friends and colleagues from his time in college sports did not see him often.

"He didn't keep in touch with a lot of people and I think that's for the most part because when people reached out to him it was to see how he was doing and he didn't really want to talk about that," Carparelli said. "But if you ever called him and told him that you had a problem or needed his help, he called you back immediately and stayed by your side until the problem was resolved. Very selfless individual. And I'll miss him dearly."

Marinatto never married. He is survived by a brother.

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