2016.04-22 Alice De Fazio headshot

Alice De Fazio

  • Title
    Director of Athletics
  • Phone
    2243
  • Email
    adefazio@njcu.edu
  • Education
    Montclair State University, `80
  • Years at NJCU
    11th year in 2017-18 (27th at NJCU)
Last Updated: August 1, 2017
 
Alice De Fazio begins her 11th year as only the fourth athletics director in New Jersey City University history. The 2017-18 year is her 27th at NJCU overall. De Fazio served 14 years over two stints as head women’s basketball coach, and is the winningest coach in school history.
 
In her career at NJCU, De Fazio has served as head women’s basketball coach, senior women’s administrator, assistant director of athletics, and associate director of athletics. She was appointed as the Interim Director of Athletics on July 1, 2007, succeeding Lawrence R. Schiner, who held that position for 30 years and was named to that role permanently in April 2011. De Fazio follows in the footsteps of three athletic directors who held the position for a combined 74 years—Les Fries (1934-59; 25 years), Thomas M. Gerrity (1958-77; 19 years) and Schiner (1977-2007).
 
Among her most notable accomplishments as director of athletics has been the introduction of the Athletic Academic Retention Program (AARP). The success of the program has been credited with the steady increase in retention of student-athletes and rising individual and team grade point averages. NJCU, in conjunction with its Student-Athlete Advisory Committee (SAAC) has also developed and participated in many community outreach initiatives, both on and off campus.
 
Athletically, De Fazio was instrumental in bringing the NCAA National Collegiate Women’s Bowling Championship to the Northeast Region for the first time as NJCU hosted the national championship event in April 2010. She served as the Tournament Director in the first-ever national championship that the University has hosted in its history. NJCU appeared in three NCAA women’s bowling tournaments (two Final Fours) and won the 2011 New Jersey Athletic Conference men’s basketball title, reaching an NCAA Tournament during her term as athletic director. She has also overseen upgrades to NJCU’s indoor and outdoor athletic facilities, including the addition of air conditioning to the John J. Moore Athletics and Fitness Center gymnasium in June, 2015.
 
De Fazio has been at the helm during a period of growth in athletic offerings. Men’s golf was introduced as a club sport before being elevated to varsity status in 2010-11. Women’s tennis and  men’s and women’s swimming will both be reintroduced in the coming years while men’s and women’s indoor and outdoor track and field plan to return to campus after an absence of several seasons.
 
NJCU’s athletic programs that compete in sports not sponsored by the NJAC have found homes. Men’s volleyball became associate members of the Skyline Conference (2012-17), men’s golf joined the Capital Athletic Conference (2014-present) and women’s bowling has been an affiliate of the Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference since 2015-16.
 
During the 2007-08 academic year, De Fazio represented NJCU as President of the NJAC. She is currently chair of the NJAC’s women’s basketball sport committee and serves on the league’s Awards committee. She has served on the NCAA Regional Selection Committee and ECAC Metro Selection Committee for women’s basketball.
 
She was originally appointed assistant athletics director and senior women’s administrator in August 1995, before being elevated to the associate athletics director role on August 26, 2003. In that role she was NJCU’s eligibility and compliance officer. Other administrative responsibilities included assessment and department reports and purchasing, in addition to serving as the liaison for all head coaches and chairing committees.
 
8647On March 5, 2007, she received the Outstanding Associate Athletic Director/SWA Award from the All-American Football Foundation.
 
De Fazio has been involved for years in the furthering of women’s athletics. A long-time member of the New Jersey Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (NJAIAW), she served as President for two years from 2004-06. With the NJAIAW, she is involved with nominating a deserving NJCU athlete for the organization’s Woman of the Year awards program. She was on the executive board of the Women’s Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WIAC), serving as secretary from 1999-2003, and was the basketball liaison for the WIAC.

De Fazio completed her final year as NJCU’s women’s basketball coach in 2004-05, guiding the Gothic Knights to a 14-13 record and an appearance in the Association of Division III Independents Northeast II championship game.

Overall, De Fazio is a member of three athletic Halls of Fame. On September 28, 2006, she was inducted into the Jersey City Sports Hall of Fame in honor of her outstanding high school and collegiate basketball career. She was inducted into the Hudson County Sports Hall of Fame in January 1998 and the Montclair State University Athletic Hall of Fame on April 17, 1994.
 
De Fazio originally came to then-Jersey City State College in 1982 as highly successful collegiate star Alice Schmidt, and proceeded to guide the Gothics to a record of 35-39, including a pair of 13-victory, back-to-back winning seasons during the three-year stretch from 1982 through 1985.
 
Following the 1985 season, she left to take an assistant coaching position at Division I Seton Hall University from 1985-87.  De Fazio returned to Montclair State College, her alma mater, where she guided the Red Hawks to a two-year record of 27-16 from 1990 through 1992.  She also served for two seasons as head coach at Jersey City’s St. Dominic Academy (1988-90), posting a 36-22 ledger.
 
De Fazio returned to NJCU in 1994 and served as interim women’s basketball coach for the 1994-95 season, before being elevated to Assistant Director of Athletics and Head Women’s Basketball Coach that summer.
 
As a collegiate women’s basketball player, De Fazio finished her career as Montclair State’s all-time leader in both assists and steals. She still is the all-time leader in assists with 630 from 1976-80, nearly 100 more than the second-place player (Wykemia Kelley, 537). Her 5.6 per game assists average in 112 career games also stands to this day. Her record of 345 steals was broken in 1997 by Lisa Villalta (482/4.6 per game), as was her record of 3.1 picks per game.
 
But what she will be most remembered for as a player is her role as a sophomore starting point guard in 1978, on a team that featured all-time great Carol Blazejowski. That year, she helped the Indians to the first Final Four in the history of women’s college basketball.  Montclair State fell to eventual champion UCLA by just eight points at Pauley Pavilion in Los Angeles, California on March 23, 1978 before claiming a 90-88 overtime victory over Wayland Baptist the next day in the consolation game for third place in the nation. The silver anniversary of that Montclair team was celebrated before an NJCU/MSU game on February 5, 2003.
 

ALL-TIME NJCU ATHLETIC DIRECTORS

ATHLETIC DIRECTOR

YEARS SERVED

TOTAL YEARS

Les Fries

1934-59

25

Thomas M. Gerrity

1958-77

19

Lawrence R. Schiner

1977-2007

30

Alice De Fazio

July 1, 2007—present

11th (as of 2017-18)


In 1980 she was nominated for the Wade Trophy as the top player in women’s college basketball, finishing as a finalist to Nancy Lieberman of Old Dominion, the only two-time winner in history. That same year, she participated in the New Jersey College North-South All-Star game.
 
De Fazio still possesses the records for first, second, and ninth most assists in a single-season in MSU history. In 1979, she established the school record with 208 dishes, and attempted to break it as a senior in 1980, before finishing with 176. The third-highest total is 163. As a sophomore in 1978 she distributed 145 assists. Her average of 8.3 assists per game in 25 games in 1979 is also a school record and led the nation that year; the 6.3 per game in 28 games in 1980 is fourth.
 
When she graduated, she also set the single-season mark with 98 steals in 1980, a record that stood until Villalta surpassed it in 1993 and again in 1994 with 140 picks. Her 98 steals is now fourth on the single-season chart. The 3.5 steals per game in 1980 is tied for sixth in a season.
 
In June 1980, she was selected in the second round of the Women’s Professional Basketball League draft by the New York Stars. When the Stars folded, the talented playmaker was signed as a free agent by the San Francisco Pioneers, and was subsequently traded to St. Louis, where she finished the 1980-81 season.
 
DeFazio is a 1980 graduate of Montclair State with a Bachelor of Arts in English. She owns a 2010 Masters in Sports Management from American Public University.

At St. Anthony’s High School in Jersey City, she earned All-Hudson County honors three times and to the Prep All-America team as a senior. She was twice a team captain, and earned All-State distinction in her senior season when she became a 1,000-point scorer (1,096 total).
 
De Fazio was married to the late Bill De Fazio, the winningest girls’ basketball coach in Hudson County history at Marist High School and St. Anthony’s, together forming the “first couple” of Hudson County basketball. 
 

THE DE FAZIO FILE

  • Director of Athletics, New Jersey City University, 2007-present
  • Associate Director of Athletics/Senior Women’s Administrator, New Jersey City University,  2003-07
  • Assistant Director of Athletics/Senior Women’s Administrator, New Jersey City University,  1995-03
  • President, New Jersey Athletic Conference, 2007-08
  • President, New Jersey Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women (NJAIAW), 2004-06
  • Executive Board/Secretary, Women’s Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (WIAC), 1999-2003
  • Montclair State University Athletic Hall of Fame (1994)
  • Hudson County Sports Hall of Fame (1998)
  • Jersey City Sports Hall of Fame (2006)
  • Outstanding Associate Athletic Director/SWA Award, All-American Football Foundation (2007)
  • NCAA Regional Selection Committee, Women’s basketball
  • ECAC Metro Selection Committee, Women’s basketball
  • Tournament Director, 2010 NCAA National Collegiate Women’s Bowling Championship 
  • Head Women’s Basketball Coach, New Jersey City University, 1982-85; 1994-2005
  • Head Women’s Basketball Coach, Montclair State University, 1990-92
  • Assistant Women’s Basketball Coach, Seton Hall University, 1985-87
  • Head Coach, St. Dominic Academy, 1988-90
  • Women’s Basketball Student-Athlete, Montclair State College, 1976-80
  • Montclair’s all-time assists leader (630). Owns single-season assists record of 208 (1978-79)
  • Finalist, 1980 Wade Trophy, awarded to the top player in women’s college basketball
  • Starting point guard on Montclair team that reached the first Final Four in the history of women’s college basketball in 1978
  • Second round draft pick in 1980 in Women’s Professional Basketball League. Played two seasons professionally in New York, San Francisco and St. Louis.
  • Three-time All-Hudson County, St. Anthony’s High School; 1975-76 All-State and Prep All-America Team; Scored 1,096 career points; two-year team captain