St. Anthony High School was a four-year co-educational
Catholic high school in
Jersey City known for its high-powered
basketball program coached by
Bob Hurley Sr. The school closed in 2017.
The school was originally founded to serve the Padua parish, made up of Polish Americans and their children. Over time, the school's demographics shifted along with the local neighborhood, to a predominantly
Black and
Hispanic population.[citation needed]
Basketball success
Beginning in the 1960s under
Bob Hurley Sr., the school was known for its boys' basketball program, which won the state championship nearly every year and produced a number of successful
NBA players.
Closure
The school struggled with funding and declining enrollments for many decades; however, funding always managed to be found.[8][9] As of the 2013–14 school year, the high school had 224 students and 16.0 classroom teachers (on an
FTE basis), the school had a
student–teacher ratio of 14.0:1. There were 59 students in 9th grade, 68 students in 10th grade, 52 students in 11th grade, and 45 students in 12th grade.[4]
In the 2015–2016 school year there were 200 students, and 2016–2017 school year there were 183 students. In September 2016 the board of trustees announced that the community needed to raise $15–20 million in order to keep the school open. In September 2016 Patrick Villanova of The Jersey Journal wrote that St. Anthony "is seemingly always on the brink of closure, considering the razor thin margins."[10]
In April 2017, officials at St. Anthony formally announced the high school would close at the end of the 2016–17 school year, due to declining enrollment (i.e. only 160 students in 2017) and the lack of funding to cover expenses.[11][12] Increasing expenses were linked to the hiring of non-
teaching order educators, and Bob Cook wrote in Forbes that gentrification may have contributed to the school's decline.[13]
The boys' basketball varsity team, coached by
Bob Hurley, had been, for over 39 years, the most dominant high school team in the country. St. Anthony had won a national record 28 state championships, set with a 74–44 win in the 2008 sectional championship game over
Trenton Catholic Academy to win the Parochial B state title, the program's 25th.[17]
With a 61–49 win in the 2011 Tournament of Champions over Plainfield High School, the St. Anthony team completed a 33–0 undefeated season, won its 11th Tournament of Champions and was recognized by USA Today with its fourth national championship.[20] The program's 27 NJSIAA state group titles are the most of any school in the state.[18]
St. Anthony produced over 150 players to
Division I basketball programs, all on full scholarships. Hurley has coached five first-round NBA draft picks, including his own son,
Bobby Hurley.
In popular media
His team has been the subject of the book titled The Street Stops Here and a 2010
documentary film based on the book.[21] That year, documentary crews captured the entire season as the Friars finished the season as the #1 team in the country.
Girls' basketball
The 1984 girls basketball team won the Non-Public Group B state championship, defeating
Wildwood Catholic High School by a score of 59–46 in the tournament final.[22][23]
Baseball
The baseball team won the Non-Public Group C state championship in 1970 (defeating
St. Joseph High School of Hammonton in the tournament final), 1971 (vs.
Saint Augustine Preparatory School) and 1972 (vs. St. Joseph of Hammonton), and won the Group B title in 1987 (vs.
Eustace Preparatory School).[24] The 1971 team came back from a 2–0 deficit to win the Parochial C title with a 3–2 win against St. Augustine.[25]
^"Our History". St. Anthony of Padua. Retrieved May 5, 2017. Father Hak obtained the old Public School No. 4 on Eighth Street, a half mile from the church. Initially serving as an annex to the parochial school, it eventually became the site of the high school.
^Borzello, Jeff.
"Hall of Famer Bob Hurley Sr. says St. Anthony High to close",
ESPN, April 6, 2017. Accessed September 12, 2017. "St. Anthony High School, home to one of the most successful programs in high school basketball, will close its doors at the end of the school year.... 'Even with fundraising that will generate close to $1.5M by the end of June, this amount is still insufficient to maintain operating expenses and cover debt payment to the Archdiocese,' Hurley wrote. 'In addition, the projected enrollment for 2017–2018 does not provide the revenues required to operate the school going forward.'"
^Schneider, Jeremy.
"No miracle for St. Anthony: Basketball powerhouse to close", NJ Advance Media for
NJ.com, April 5, 2017. Accessed September 12, 2017. "St. Anthony High School will suspend operations at the end of the 2016–17 school year in June due to a lack of funding and dwindling enrollment, Bob Hurley Sr., the school's president and basketball team's Hall of Fame coach, announced on Wednesday."
^"St. Anthony sets national record", The Record, March 9, 2008. Accessed March 9, 2008. "St. Anthony set a national record by winning its 25th State title Saturday with a 74-44 rout of Trenton Catholic in the Non-Public B final at the
Ritacco Center in Toms River."
^Ehalt, Matt.
"Bob Hurley, St. Anthony take crown",
ESPN.com, March 22, 2011. Accessed June 22, 2011. "The Friars, ranked No. 1 in the nation by Powerade Fab 50 ESPN Rise rankings, improved to 33-0 with the win. Hurley has now won 11 Tournament of Champions, and this is his fourth squad to win the unofficial national championship, as awarded by USA Today. He also has won more than 1,000 games and 24 state titles."
^Burrows, Walt.
"Late surge by St. Anthony's thwarts Wildwood Catholic", Courier-Post, March 12, 1984. Accessed February 18, 2021, via
Newspapers.com. "reams of a Parochial B state championship for the Wildwood Catholic High School girls' basketball team were reduced to ashes in the final four minutes yesterday when St Anthony's of Jersey City pulled away for a 59-46 victory in the Seton Hall University gymnasium."
^Lewis, Brian.
"Duke's Defense No Southern Comfort", New York Post, March 17, 2006. Accessed April 1, 2019. "With 2:19 gone in the second half, forward Peter Cipriano of St. Anthony’s in Jersey City hit a jumper that brought his team with 40-36."
^Tim Coleman,
NJIT Highlanders men's basketball. Accessed September 1, 2023. "Coleman, a resident of Union, NJ, is a graduate of St. Anthony High School in Jersey City, where he was coached by Bob Hurley, a 2010 inductee into the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame."
^Donald Copeland,
Wagner Seahawks men's basketball. Accessed October 13, 2022. "Before accepting a full scholarship at Seton Hall, Copeland played for legendary head coach Bob Hurley Sr. at St. Anthony, helping lead the Friars to New Jersey State Championships in 2001 and 2002, with the latter team ranking No. 2 in the nation."
^
abcWeiss, Dick.
"Ahmad Nivins grows into stardom at St. Joseph's", New York Daily News, February 15, 2009. Accessed February 27, 2009. "His unbeaten 1989 team alone produced three NBA first-round picks – Bobby Hurley, Terry Dehere and Rodrick Rhodes. Six players from last year's 32–0 mythical national championship team – Mike Rosario, Travon Woodall, Jio Fontan, A.J. Rogers, Alberto Estwick and Tyshawn Taylor – accepted Division I scholarships."
^Jerome Frink,
FIU Panthers men's basketball. Accessed April 1, 2019. "A major contributor for St. Anthony’s (N.J.) during the 2010-11 and 2011-12 seasons in which the Friars went 65-0 with consecutive NJSIAA Tournament of Champion titles and one national championship."
^Robb, Adam.
"Former Jersey City graffiti artist KAWS has first solo museum show", The Jersey Journal, June 25, 2010, updated January 18, 2019. Accessed November 22, 2019. "Stare long enough and you'll start to notice the faded graffiti tagged along the top floors of some surrounding factories, like the crude white letters spelling KAWS on two sides of a rooftop at 13th and Coles. It's the tag of Brian Donnelly, arguably Jersey City's most celebrated artist to date, who painted his pseudonym there in the early 1990s so it would be visible from his classroom window at nearby St. Anthony High School."
^Zagoria, Adam.
'In St. Anthony’s Final Days, a Scramble to Recruit Its Best Talent", The New York Times, April 25, 2017. Accessed April 1, 2019. "When Paterson Catholic High School, which was not far from St. Anthony and had established a healthy basketball rivalry with Hurley’s teams, closed its doors in 2010, St. Anthony was the biggest beneficiary. Two of Paterson Catholic’s best players — Kyle Anderson, a 6-9 forward who now plays for the San Antonio Spurs, and Myles Mack, a point guard who went on to Rutgers and now plays professionally in Europe — relocated to St. Anthony."
^Rowe, John.
"Markis McDuffie, who grew up in Paterson, leads Wichita State into NIT semifinals", The Record, April 2, 2019. Accessed December 26, 2021. "Markis McDuffie lives in Paterson and went to high school in Jersey City.... He’s one of the endless number of college and pro players who honed their skills under the tutelage of Hall of Fame coach Bob Hurley Sr. at the now-closed St. Anthony."
^Derrick Mercer,
American University. Accessed April 1, 2019. "Starting point guard for prestigious St. Anthony (N.J.) program under head coach Bob Hurley"
^Teitel, Jon.
"Tourney Talk: CHD interviews Manhattan PF Ashton Pankey", College Hoops Daily, March 17, 2015. Accessed April 1, 2019. "You played for two of the best high school coaches ever in Bob Hurley (at St. Anthony’s) and Jack Curran (Archbishop Molloy): how did they help prepare you for the college game?"
^Curry, Jack.
"Lakers Rookie's Search for Solace", The New York Times, January 15, 1989. Accessed August 22, 2018. "David Rivers has always been ready for the game. One of the finest players to come out of New Jersey in the last 20 years, he overcame obstacles to become an All-State performer at St. Anthony High School."
^Vega, Michael.
"Valentin gifted in major league bow", Boston Globe, July 28, 1992. Accessed April 1, 2011. "With [Tim Naehring] nursing a sprained right wrist and Luis Rivera riding out a slump on the pine, the time seemed perfect for the 25-year-old from Jersey City, N.J. It was there Valentin grew up playing high school basketball at St. Anthony's alongside former Notre Dame star David Rivers."
^Futterman, Matthew for The Star-Ledger"At rock bottom, Luther Wright finds salvation; Ex-Jazzman finds new life after years of excess", Deseret News, June 5, 2007. Accessed August 28, 2017. "His height and success brought him to St. Anthony High School, the basketball powerhouse in Jersey City coached by Bob Hurley. He lasted a year before flunking out.... Using a cousin's address, Wright's family enrolled him at Elizabeth High School, another powerhouse, where he led his team to victory in the state's Tournament of Champions."