Rocco Commisso, the outspoken owner of Italian football club Fiorentina and chairman of New York-based Mediacom Communications, has died. He was 76.
Both Fiorentina and Mediacom announced Commisso’s death early on Saturday without providing a cause.
“After a prolonged period of medical treatment, our beloved president has left us, and today we all mourn his passing,” Fiorentina said. “His love for Fiorentina was the greatest gift he gave himself.”
After making Mediacom into one of the United States’ biggest cable television companies, Commisso purchased Fiorentina in 2019 and became known for speaking out against Italy’s bureaucracy and inability to build new stadiums.
Commisso was born in Calabria and migrated to the United States at the age of 12.
He also owned the New York Cosmos and played football at Columbia University, the Ivy League school that he continued to support philanthropically. The university’s soccer stadium is named for him.
At Fiorentina, Commisso celebrated reaching the Conference League final in 2023 and 2024.
But the team has struggled this season and is currently in Serie A’s relegation zone. (AP)
