Bob Ferry ran the Washington Bullets from 1973 to 1990, and the team made the playoffs 13 times in that 17-year span.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Bob Ferry, a two-time NBA executive of the year who was general manager for the Washington Bullets when they won their only championship in 1978, has died. He was 84.
Washington coach Wes Unseld Jr. announced Ferry’s death before Wednesday night’s game at Boston.
“Obviously he and his family, dear to my parents and the Unseld family, to the Wizards’ organization, and we want to just wish him and his family the best, keep them in our thoughts and prayers,” said Unseld, whose father was a star player for the championship team.
The elder Unseld also coached the Bullets toward the end of Ferry’s tenure as GM.
Ferry became the team’s GM in 1973 and held that position until 1990. Washington reached the 1975 NBA Finals, losing to Golden State, then won it all three years later by beating Seattle. The Bullets lost a Finals rematch with Seattle in 1979.
Our thoughts are with the family of franchise legend Bob Ferry following his passing.
Ferry played five seasons with the organization and spent 17 years as its general manager, winning NBA Executive of the Year twice and a championship in 1978. pic.twitter.com/5fVjGRYBJU
— Washington Wizards (@WashWizards) October 27, 2021
Ferry won executive of the year honors in 1979 and 1982.
Ferry was the father of Danny Ferry, a star at Duke who was picked No. 2 overall in the 1989 draft and later became a GM as well.
Bob Ferry was drafted by the St. Louis Hawks in 1959 and played 10 seasons in the NBA. The Bullets acquired him in 1964 in an eight-player deal that sent Rod Thorn — later a prominent executive himself — to Detroit.