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'Finny' ends courageous battle with cancer

| March 21, 2009 11:00 PM
Craig Finberg's two-month battle with pancreatic cancer came to an end Friday (March 20) afternoon as he passed away at his home in Dillon at the age of 51, surrounded by his family and friends. They included Tammy, his wife of 12 years.

According to a note from his family on the CaringBridge Web site, "It was a very peaceful ending to such a wonderful life. We hope that you will join us now to help celebrate 'Finny's' life."

A Columbia Falls native, Finberg was a 1975 graduate of Columbia Falls High School who led the Wildcats to the Class A state basketball championship game. He earned all-state recognition and was inducted into the CFHS Hall of Fame.

Funeral services in Dillon are tentatively scheduled for Saturday, March 28. A memorial service is set for a day earlier, March 27, in Columbia Falls, according to his family.

After graduating from CFHS, Finberg was an outstanding player for Montana State University. As a Bobcat, he scored 1,473 points, the seventh most in school history. He finished second in assists, and became a member of the Bobcat Hall of Fame. After college, Finberg played in the Continental Basketball Association and for a short time with the Portland Trailblazers.

Affectionately known as "Finny," Finberg coached basketball at Beaverhead High School in Dillon for 18 seasons. His 281-160 record made him the most successful coach in school history. His teams won two state championships. He was a

For the last two seasons, Finny was an assistant coach on the Montana Western men's basketball team, also in Dillon.

Finberg was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in mid-January. He and his wife, Tammy, traveled to Zion, Ill., in February for chemotherapy treatment for Craig. On the Web site, his family said that the chemo is not working in trying to battle an aggressive form of cancer.

The family wrote on the site that it was fitting that his alma mater, Columbia Falls, was playing the team he formerly coached, Dillon, in the state championship game March 14. They said it's also fitting that his sickness is about to end during his favorite time of year — March Madness.

Find the Finberg Web site at www.caringbridge.org/visit/craigfinberg.

Read more about Craig Finberg in the March 26 issue of the Hungry Horse News.

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Craig Finberg's two-month battle with pancreatic cancer came to an end Friday (March 20) afternoon as he passed away at his home in Dillon at the age of 51, surrounded by his family and friends. They included Tammy, his wife of 12 years.

According to a note from his family on the CaringBridge Web site, "It was a very peaceful ending to such a wonderful life. We hope that you will join us now to help celebrate 'Finny's' life."

A Columbia Falls native, Finberg was a 1975 graduate of Columbia Falls High School who led the Wildcats to the Class A state basketball championship game. He earned all-state recognition and was inducted into the CFHS Hall of Fame.

Funeral services in Dillon are tentatively scheduled for Saturday, March 28. A memorial service is set for a day earlier, March 27, in Columbia Falls, according to his family.

After graduating from CFHS, Finberg was an outstanding player for Montana State University. As a Bobcat, he scored 1,473 points, the seventh most in school history. He finished second in assists, and became a member of the Bobcat Hall of Fame. After college, Finberg played in the Continental Basketball Association and for a short time with the Portland Trailblazers.

Affectionately known as "Finny," Finberg coached basketball at Beaverhead High School in Dillon for 18 seasons. His 281-160 record made him the most successful coach in school history. His teams won two state championships. He was a

For the last two seasons, Finny was an assistant coach on the Montana Western men's basketball team, also in Dillon.

Finberg was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in mid-January. He and his wife, Tammy, traveled to Zion, Ill., in February for chemotherapy treatment for Craig. On the Web site, his family said that the chemo is not working in trying to battle an aggressive form of cancer.

The family wrote on the site that it was fitting that his alma mater, Columbia Falls, was playing the team he formerly coached, Dillon, in the state championship game March 14. They said it's also fitting that his sickness is about to end during his favorite time of year — March Madness.

Find the Finberg Web site at www.caringbridge.org/visit/craigfinberg.

Read more about Craig Finberg in the March 26 issue of the Hungry Horse News.