Auerbach was ‘godfather of all the Celtics’
City erected statue to late basketball legend over 20 years ago
![]() Winslow Townson / AP Fans touch the head of a statue of legendary Boston Celtics Hall of Famer Red Auerbach in Boston after hearing of his death on Saturday. |
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BOSTON - Through 16 NBA titles and more than half a century, no one meant more to the Boston Celtics than Red Auerbach.
The coach who lit up cigars to celebrate an unprecedented nine championships. The general manager who acquired Hall of Famers Bill Russell, Kevin McHale, Robert Parish and Larry Bird. The team’s president when it won its league-record 16th title, in 1986, and when he died of a heart attack Saturday at the age of 89.
“He is the godfather of all the Celtics,” former player and coach Chris Ford said.
But he was more than that.
“Nobody has had as much impact on a sport as Red Auerbach had on the game of basketball. He was a pioneer of the NBA,” said Tommy Heinsohn, a Hall of Fame player in Boston before becoming a Celtics coach and broadcaster. “He left his philosophy of winning championships, playing hard and playing as a team with several generations of players. ... The game of basketball will never see anyone else like him.”
Arnold Auerbach was born in Brooklyn in 1917, and had already coached two professional teams when he took over the Celtics in 1950. He won an unprecedented nine titles — Phil Jackson has since tied him — including eight in a row before he stepped down in 1966.
Auerbach pulled the strings that brought seven more championships to Boston, and maintained a presence as the Celtics president and patriarch over the last 20 years. “Our ownership group feels the highlight of becoming owners is clearly the chance to have known and worked with Red,” owner Wyc Grousbeck said Saturday.
Auerbach received the U.S. Navy’s Lone Sailor Award on Wednesday at a ceremony in Washington, where he lived. Hall of Famer Bob Cousy, who knew Auerbach since 1950, was with him.
“I think Arnold was an absolute giant in the field,” the former Celtics point guard said Saturday. “I have been around a lot of competitive people but his commitment to winning was absolute nothing was more important. He was relentless and produced the greatest basketball dynasty so far that this country has ever seen and certainly that the NBA has ever seen.”
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“He did so many things to help improve the game,” said Bill Sharman, who played for Auerbach in Boston and went on to become coach and general manager of the Los Angeles Lakers. “He was a coach who went out of his way to help his players. ... Besides being such a great coach, he was also a great friend and he will be truly missed.”
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“He was the gold standard in coaching and in civic leadership, and he set an example that continues today,” Kennedy said. “More than being a legendary coach and Boston institution, Red was a person of the highest caliber with a heart and generosity that knew no bounds. ... With every whistle that blows for the Boston Celtics, Red’s spirit is celebrated and his memory cherished. He was loved and never will be forgotten.”
Auerbach’s failing health put a scare into the Celtics and their fans last year, when he spent much of August visiting hospitals for tests and an undisclosed surgical procedure. But he made it to Boston for opening night and held court with the media before the game.
Grousbeck said that Auerbach was preparing to attend the team’s Nov. 1 opener. Instead, the Celtics will dedicate the season to him.
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