ChillyDawg
New Fish
Sonics Foreverhttps://www.sonicsforever.com/blog/frank-furtado-the-cornerstone-of-the-sonics
SPU Falcons: Catching Up With Frank Furtado (2016)https://spufalcons.com/news/2016/7/29/16_gen_July29.aspx
Seattle Times (click for full article)https://www.seattletimes.com/sports...time-sonics-trainer-frank-furtado-dies-at-90/
‘This one really hurts’: Longtime Sonics trainer Frank Furtado dies at 90[/i]
Frank Furtado, the longtime NBA trainer who spent more than three decades with the Seattle Sonics, died Saturday at the age of 90.
Furtado’s death was confirmed by his daughter Cherie Furtado.
“He was so giving and loving and hardworking,” Furtado’s grandson Robbie said. “Everybody seemed to know him and everyone always had something good to say about him. He worked so hard to make sure everyone had what they needed. And that’s what he loved.
“When I think of him, he was a great storyteller. … He loved sailing. He loved boats. He loved gardening. He loved sharing stories with people. He would talk to you for three hours if you let him.”
Furtado is survived by his wife Sarah; children Michelle, Cherie, Frank III; grandchildren Robbie, Jessica and Lexie; and great grandson Matias.
Ten years later, NBA great and Sonics coach Bill Russell asked Furtado if he would be the team’s trainer. Sarah joined the Sonics four years earlier in 1970 as an executive assistant and spent 26 years with the franchise.
“He loved teaching and he loved being a coach, but the wrestling program was closing,” Cherie Furtado said. “I remember him saying, I’m sure I’ll probably never get another offer to work in the NBA, but I can always go back to teaching. It was not an easy decision because he was really passionate about being a coach and a teacher.
“Being a trainer in ’74 is not like it is today. … I remember he had to stop by the corner grocery store every day to buy ice because there were no ice machines where they practiced at that time.”
Furtado, who won two NBA trainer of the year awards, retired in 2000 and remained with the Sonics as an assistant trainer until the franchise relocated to Oklahoma City in 2008.
On Feb. 23, 2001, the Sonics named their practice facility “The Furtado Center” in honor of Frank and Sarah.
“Frank was that rock that was around basically from the beginning until the end,” said Hall of Famer Jack Sikma, who played nine years (1977-86) with the Sonics. “He’s going to be missed. He lived life the right way.”
“He was really my guy,” Payton said. “He really took care of me. If it wasn’t for him, I would have missed a lot of games. He was respected by all of us. He demanded respect. He made us do the things we had to do. We had to get in for treatments. He was the one always figuring out what kind of treatment we need.”
During his 13-year Sonics tenure, Payton suffered through an assortment of injuries, including a chronic back ailment. However, he started 993 of 999 games in Seattle.
“One time when my back was really bad, Frank went and found a guy in Wyoming and got a (hyperbaric) chamber where he had me sit in there,” Payton said. “At the time, things like that were a little crazy. But if Big Daddy said do it, you did it. … He was the one he found that chair that I used to sit in all the time.”
https://twitter.com/Iconic_sonics/status/1468283401367134210https://twitter.com/CoachKarl22/status/1467980431756873746https://twitter.com/SeattleSonics/status/1467970863358431233
SPU Falcons: Catching Up With Frank Furtado (2016)https://spufalcons.com/news/2016/7/29/16_gen_July29.aspx
Seattle Times (click for full article)https://www.seattletimes.com/sports...time-sonics-trainer-frank-furtado-dies-at-90/
‘This one really hurts’: Longtime Sonics trainer Frank Furtado dies at 90[/i]
Frank Furtado, the longtime NBA trainer who spent more than three decades with the Seattle Sonics, died Saturday at the age of 90.
Furtado’s death was confirmed by his daughter Cherie Furtado.
“He was so giving and loving and hardworking,” Furtado’s grandson Robbie said. “Everybody seemed to know him and everyone always had something good to say about him. He worked so hard to make sure everyone had what they needed. And that’s what he loved.
“When I think of him, he was a great storyteller. … He loved sailing. He loved boats. He loved gardening. He loved sharing stories with people. He would talk to you for three hours if you let him.”
Furtado is survived by his wife Sarah; children Michelle, Cherie, Frank III; grandchildren Robbie, Jessica and Lexie; and great grandson Matias.
Ten years later, NBA great and Sonics coach Bill Russell asked Furtado if he would be the team’s trainer. Sarah joined the Sonics four years earlier in 1970 as an executive assistant and spent 26 years with the franchise.
“He loved teaching and he loved being a coach, but the wrestling program was closing,” Cherie Furtado said. “I remember him saying, I’m sure I’ll probably never get another offer to work in the NBA, but I can always go back to teaching. It was not an easy decision because he was really passionate about being a coach and a teacher.
“Being a trainer in ’74 is not like it is today. … I remember he had to stop by the corner grocery store every day to buy ice because there were no ice machines where they practiced at that time.”
Furtado, who won two NBA trainer of the year awards, retired in 2000 and remained with the Sonics as an assistant trainer until the franchise relocated to Oklahoma City in 2008.
On Feb. 23, 2001, the Sonics named their practice facility “The Furtado Center” in honor of Frank and Sarah.
“Frank was that rock that was around basically from the beginning until the end,” said Hall of Famer Jack Sikma, who played nine years (1977-86) with the Sonics. “He’s going to be missed. He lived life the right way.”
“He was really my guy,” Payton said. “He really took care of me. If it wasn’t for him, I would have missed a lot of games. He was respected by all of us. He demanded respect. He made us do the things we had to do. We had to get in for treatments. He was the one always figuring out what kind of treatment we need.”
During his 13-year Sonics tenure, Payton suffered through an assortment of injuries, including a chronic back ailment. However, he started 993 of 999 games in Seattle.
“One time when my back was really bad, Frank went and found a guy in Wyoming and got a (hyperbaric) chamber where he had me sit in there,” Payton said. “At the time, things like that were a little crazy. But if Big Daddy said do it, you did it. … He was the one he found that chair that I used to sit in all the time.”
https://twitter.com/Iconic_sonics/status/1468283401367134210https://twitter.com/CoachKarl22/status/1467980431756873746https://twitter.com/SeattleSonics/status/1467970863358431233
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