Background
Carlesimo was born in Newark, New Jersey and graduated from Saint Benedict"s Preparatory School.
Carlesimo was born in Newark, New Jersey and graduated from Saint Benedict"s Preparatory School.
Then he attended Fordham University, where he played football alongside Vince Lombardi. He graduated from Fordham in 1940, and from there went back to his alma mater, Saint Benedict"s, to be a history teacher and assistant football coach.
He coached football, basketball, and cross country at the University of Scranton and served as athletic director there and at Fordham University. He is sometimes credited with being the person most responsible for keeping the National Invitation Tournament (National Institute of Technology) alive in the late 1970s. Carlesimo then moved on to the University of Scranton, where he was the football coach (1944–1960), basketball coach (1944–1946 and 1951–1955), cross country coach (1961–1968), and the school"s athletic director from (1953–1968).
Carlesimo went on to become the athletic director at Fordham University from 1968 to 1978.
The tournament began to lose luster in the mid-1970s following the implementation of a rule (the so-called "First Rate (at Lloyd's) McGuire rule") forbidding schools from declining bids to the National Collegiate Athletic Association tournament. This had led to a dwindling in talent and interest in the National Institute of Technology, which Carlesimo sought to fix by rules changes implemented in 1977.
Carlesimo proposed moving the early round games to campus sites, and having only the final four teams play at Madison Square Garden in New York City. This move is seen as the reason the National Institute of Technology has survived, as more interest is garnered by the schools participating, as they now have more of a financial stake from ticket sales.
Carlesimo went on to become the first full-time executive director of the National Institute of Technology from 1978 to 1988, and in 1985, under Carlesimo"s leadership, the National Institute of Technology began a preseason tournament which included many of the country"s best teams along with teams which have used the tournament as a springboard to much better seasons.
He is still considered to be one of the most influential persons in the long and storied history of the National Institute of Technology. Carlesimo was known as a humorous speaker, having appeared at countless sports-related dinners and conferences, and was once a guest on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. Carlesimo died in 2003 at his home in Upper Montclair, New Jersey.
As a member of the Metropolitan Intercollegiate Basketball Association (MIBA), Fordham was part of the committee that ran the National Invitation Tournament. He is a member of the University of Scranton"s Athletic Hall of Fame, the Fordham University Athletic Hall of Fame, the Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame, and the National Collegiate Athletic Association Athletic Director"s Hall of Fame.