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CORRECTING and REPLACING Mediacom Communications Announces Visitation and Funeral Arrangements for Rocco B. Commisso

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CORRECTING and REPLACING Mediacom Communications Announces Visitation and Funeral Arrangements for Rocco B. Commisso
News

News

CORRECTING and REPLACING Mediacom Communications Announces Visitation and Funeral Arrangements for Rocco B. Commisso

2026-01-18 10:32 Last Updated At:10:40

MEDIACOM PARK, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Jan 17, 2026--

Please replace the release with the following corrected version due to multiple revisions.

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MEDIACOM COMMUNICATIONS ANNOUNCES VISITATION AND FUNERAL ARRANGEMENTS FOR ROCCO B. COMMISSO

Mediacom Communications today announced visitation and funeral arrangements for its founder, chairman, and chief executive officer, Rocco B. Commisso.

In lieu of flowers, donations may be made in Rocco’s memory to:

Hackensack University Medical Center

Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center

Columbia University Medical Center

Rocco B. Commisso Obituary

With profound sadness, Mediacom Communications announces the passing of Rocco B. Commisso, the company’s founder, chairman, and chief executive officer. Commisso was one of the most successful Italian immigrant entrepreneurs in our nation’s history. A member of the prestigious Forbes 400, his illustrious career with the cable television industry spans nearly 50 years.

Rocco was born in 1949 in Marina di Gioiosa Ionica, Calabria, Italy to the late Giuseppe and the late Maria Rosa Commisso. Loving husband of Catherine Commisso. Devoted father of Giuseppe B. Commisso and Marisa M. Commisso. Beloved brother of the late Nicola A. Murdocca and his wife Diana and his sister Raffaelina Evangelista and her husband Gilberto and his sister Italia Commisso Weinand and her husband George. Also survived by many nieces and nephews and great nieces and nephews.

Commisso founded Mediacom in 1995 to acquire and reinvigorate cable systems in the nation’s underserved smaller communities. In 2000, he directed a successful initial public offering for Mediacom, paving the way for the company’s dramatic growth into the nation’s 5th largest cable television provider, offering high-speed data, video, phone, and mobile services to over 3 million households and businesses in 22 states. He took the company private in 2011, and now Mediacom is wholly owned by the Commisso family.

Commisso began his business career at Pfizer Inc.’s manufacturing facility in Brooklyn, NY. After graduating from business school in 1975, he spent a decade in the financial community, initially at Chase Manhattan Bank (now J.P. Morgan Chase) and then at Royal Bank of Canada, where he led the bank’s U.S. lending activities to companies in the media and communications sectors. From 1986 to 1995, he served as executive vice president, chief financial officer, and director of Cablevision Industries Corporation. During his tenure there, privately held Cablevision Industries grew from the 25th to the 8th largest cable company in the nation, serving 1.3 million customers at the time of its merger with Time Warner.

Commisso previously served on the boards of the National Cable & Telecommunications Association, C-SPAN, CableLabs, Cyndx LLC, and the National Italian American Foundation. During his distinguished business career, he was bestowed with numerous awards and honors, including the Ernst & Young Entrepreneur of the Year Award, the National Italian American Foundation’s Life Achievement Award, the Ellis Island Medal of Honor, and the Vanguard Award for Distinguished Leadership, the cable industry’s highest honor. Commisso was inducted into several esteemed organizations including the Broadcasting & Cable Hall of Fame, the Cable Center Hall of Fame, and the Columbia University Athletics Hall of Fame. Under his leadership, Mediacom was named a U.S. Best Managed Company by Deloitte Private and the Wall Street Journal from 2021 to 2025. In 2023, Commisso’s incredible life story was featured by 60 Minutes in a segment entitled “Only in America.”

Born in Calabria, Italy, Commisso immigrated to the U.S. at the age of 12. He graduated from Mount Saint Michael Academy in the Bronx in 1967. He attended Columbia University on a full undergraduate scholarship where he earned both a BS degree in industrial engineering and an MBA degree from the Graduate Business School. At the Business School, he was elected president of the student body and was the recipient of the prestigious Business School Service Award.

Commisso played soccer for the Columbia Lions in the 1967–1970 period. He was a member of a freshman squad that finished with an undefeated record and served as co-captain of the 1970 team that made Columbia’s first-ever appearance in the NCAA Playoffs. For his exploits on the field, Commisso became a three-time All-Ivy League Honoree and was invited to try out for the U.S. Soccer Team organized for the 1972 Olympics.

Over his more than 50 years as an alumni supporter of Columbia soccer, the men’s soccer program was among the most successful in the Ivy League and all major sports at the university. In the mid-1970s, he co-founded Friends of Columbia Soccer and, from 1978 to 1986, he was its chairman. During this time, Columbia won 8 straight Ivy Championships and became the only Ivy League school ever to compete in the final game of the NCAA Championship.

In 2004, on the 250th anniversary of Columbia’s founding, the school’s newspaper, the Daily Spectator, listed Commisso among Columbia’s 250 greatest undergraduate alumni of all time. For many years, Columbia has awarded an annual Men’s Soccer Prize in his name. In 2013, Columbia recognized his contributions to the university by naming its soccer venue, at the school’s Baker Athletics Complex, the Rocco B. Commisso Soccer Stadium.

Throughout his life, Commisso poured significant personal and corporate resources into funding educational opportunities for young people. Through Mediacom’s World Class Scholars Program, September 11th Memorial Scholarship Fund, Entrepreneur of Tomorrow Award, and other initiatives, he provided educational scholarships to 4,000 students nationwide. In 2014, he established the Rocco B. Commisso American Dream Fund at his high school in the Bronx - Mount Saint Michael Academy - to ensure that the school can continue to recruit and educate deserving young men for generations to come. In 2022, he and his wife established the Rocco and Catherine Commisso Scholarship at Columbia University’s Fu Foundation School of Engineering and Applied Science which is designed to annually benefit a cohort of up to 20 students in perpetuity.

In January 2017, Commisso purchased a majority ownership stake in the New York Cosmos and became the club’s chairman. The Cosmos are the most recognized American soccer brand in the world. After beginning play at Yankee Stadium in 1971, the iconic club won a record total of 8 professional soccer championships and brought some of the biggest stars in international soccer to the USA including Pelé, Franz Beckenbauer, Giorgio Chinaglia, Carlos Alberto, and more recently, Raúl and Marcos Senna. In July 2025, the New York Cosmos were acquired by North Jersey Pro Soccer based in Paterson, NJ. The Commisso family continues to maintain a minority ownership stake in the club.

In June 2019, Commisso acquired world-renowned ACF Fiorentina and became president of the decorated Italian soccer club. Since its founding in 1926, Fiorentina has been based in beautiful Florence, a city known throughout the world for representing the very best of Italy’s culture. Commonly referred to as La Viola for its distinctive purple colors, Fiorentina competes in Serie A, the top division of Italian soccer. His lasting contribution to the historic club is Rocco B. Commisso Viola Park, the state-of-the-art sporting center opened in 2023 that serves as the permanent home for all ACF Fiorentina’s football teams, including the men’s, women’s, and youth squads.

ABOUT MEDIACOM COMMUNICATIONS CORPORATION

Mediacom Communications Corporation is the 5th largest cable operator in the United States and the leading gigabit broadband provider to smaller markets primarily in the Midwest and Southeast. Through its fiber-rich network, Mediacom offers high-speed data, video, phone, and mobile services to over 3 million households and businesses across 22 states. The company delivers scalable broadband solutions to commercial and public-sector customers of all sizes through Mediacom Business and sells advertising and production services under the OnMedia brand. More information about Mediacom is available at mediacomcable.com.

Rocco B. Commisso

Rocco B. Commisso

STORRS, Conn. (AP) — The images of the UConn men’s and women’s basketball teams walking off the court for the final time last season couldn’t have been more different.

There was joy as Paige Bueckers led the women’s squad to a record 12th national title. The men’s basketball team’s dreams of winning a third consecutive championship ended with a two-point loss to eventual national champion Florida in the 2025 NCAA Tournament.

Both teams went into the offseason with questions to be answered.

Bringing back a nucleus led by Azzi Fudd and Sarah Strong had the women’s program in a familiar position of being a top title contender. The defensive deficiencies that plagued the men's squad during a failed quest for a 3-peat needed to be addressed.

So far, so good. UConn is the only program ranked in the top five in both national polls. The women's team has won 34 consecutive games. Saturday's victory at Georgetown was the 14th straight for the men's program.

“There is a comfort level,” UConn women’s basketball coach Geno Auriemma said. “You are also stepping into a program where there is a set of standards that you have. When you first get in here, you are not sure, ‘how do we do this?’ You spend more time watching rather than doing. It takes a little bit of time, a little bit of talking from the coaches for those kids to get a little more comfortable, a little more assertive.

“It may be a little bit easier on the guy’s side because some of those guys are 18-19 years old and they are men almost, they played a lot of basketball and they have aspirations to be pros. I think there is a purpose for them being at UConn. For us, sometimes they know they are going to be here for four years so there is, ’I’ll wait my turn.”

Braylon Mullins missed six games before debuting for Dan Hurley’s Huskies in a late-November win over Illinois. Blanca Quinonez was sidelined for the first two women’s games.

They certainly have made up for lost time. Quinonez’s stats per 40 minutes aren’t far off from what reigning national freshman of the year Sarah Strong put up last season. Among the UConn women’s basketball legends, they come closest to what Nykesha Sales accomplished as a freshman on the first national championship teams for the Huskies. She is averaging 10.8 points per game heading into Monday's matchup with Notre Dame,

On the men’s side, Mullins and Eric Reibe combine for 35.3 points per 40 minutes. That’s the highest total for a pair of UConn men’s basketball freshmen since Ray Allen and Doron Sheffer’s mark of 38.9 during the 1993-94 season.

No freshman had more pressure than the 7-foot-1 Reibe when injuries forced UConn’s starting center Tarris Reed Jr. to miss the Arizona and Kansas games. Reibe averaged 13.5 points and six rebounds in those two games. He is contributing 7.1 points and 3.9 rebounds in 16 minutes this season.

“He’s just got an amazing spirit about him,” Hurley said. “He’s a lot like Donovan (Clingan) in a way where the guy just comes in and he’s just got this big smile and so much joy when he plays ball, and in a large part, he saved our season.”

The women’s program needed another ballhandling guard after the departures of Bueckers and Kaitlyn Chen. Getting some defensive help in the post was another priority.

The additions of former USC guard Kayleigh Heckel and Serah Williams, a double-double machine at Wisconsin, have proven to be perfect for the top-ranked Huskies. Heckel is one of six UConn players with at least twice as many assists as turnovers.

Williams isn’t approaching the numbers she put up at Wisconsin, but the former Big Ten Defensive Player of the Year does keep Strong from having to battle in the low post on defense on every possession. Her arrival was one of the reasons why this was viewed as one of Auriemma’s deepest teams in recent memory.

“I’m not there yet, but I definitely understand my teammates more and how they like passes, how they like ball screens, where they like to get their shots off,” Williams said. “I think that was a part of the reason why I came here just to see what it takes to be on that other side.”

Hurley credited Georgia transfer Silas Demary Jr. for changing how the third-ranked Huskies play defensively. The 6-foot-4 Demary had a triple-double against Bryant and had a recent six-game stretch in conference play when he averaged 12.8 points and 7.3 assists. His best game came in an overtime win at Providence when he had 23 points, 15 assists and five steals. Demary is one of five double-digit scorers for UConn. He also leads the Huskies with 116 assists and 34 steals.

“Being a point guard here, it comes with a lot of responsibility,” Demary said. “I think the coaches are putting me in the position to keep trending in the right direction like Shabazz (Napier), like Kemba (Walker), even Tristen (Newton), those are guys who made plays and were winners. I have to keep making the right plays and keep being a steady point guard.”

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign up here. AP college basketball: https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-poll and https://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

DePaul Blue guard Layden Blocker (2) is guarded by UConn guard Silas Demary Jr. (2) in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game, Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026, in Hartford, Conn. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

DePaul Blue guard Layden Blocker (2) is guarded by UConn guard Silas Demary Jr. (2) in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game, Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026, in Hartford, Conn. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

UConn guard Braylon Mullins shoots over DePaul Blue guard RJ Smith, left, in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game, Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026, in Hartford, Conn. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

UConn guard Braylon Mullins shoots over DePaul Blue guard RJ Smith, left, in the first half of an NCAA college basketball game, Saturday, Jan. 10, 2026, in Hartford, Conn. (AP Photo/Jessica Hill)

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