. Ftorek began his coaching career with the AHL's New Haven Nighthawks in 1985. He remained with them until the 1987–88 season when he moved up to the NHL as the
Los Angeles Kings' head coach. On May 2, 1989, he was fired by the Kings for what was reported as because of his problems in communication with players, most notably with
Wayne Gretzky. Following this, he was an assistant coach for the Quebec Nordiques and
New Jersey Devils in the NHL. In 1992, he was named head coach of the AHL's
Utica Devils - New Jersey's top farm team - and remained as head coach when the team became the
Albany River Rats. In 1995, the same year the New Jersey Devils won the
Stanley Cup Final, Ftorek led the River Rats to the
Calder Cup in the AHL; Ftorek's name was engraved on the
Stanley Cup for that year. In 1996, Ftorek began his second stint as a New Jersey Devils assistant coach, then took the head coach's position in 1998. On January 29, 2000, the Devils played a memorable game against Detroit. In the second period, the Devils'
Jay Pandolfo was involved in a collision with Detroit's
Mathieu Dandenault that left Pandolfo's face bloody after a collision with the boards in the Red Wings zone. The officials allowed play to continue, only for
Kirk Maltby to skate down to the other end of the rink and score a goal that gave Detroit a 3–1 lead. Assistant coach
Larry Robinson replaced Ftorek and the Devils went on to win their second Stanley Cup. He remained with the team as a scout, and had his name engraved on the Stanley Cup for the second time in that year. Ftorek joined the
Boston Bruins as head coach in 2001. However, after two years of poor efforts by his teams, Ftorek was fired late in the 2002–03 season, again with only nine games remaining in the season. Bruins general manager
Mike O'Connell took over as coach for the rest of the season. In 2003, Ftorek rejoined the Devils as head coach of their AHL affiliate in Albany. When the Devils affiliation was moved to the
Lowell Devils, Ftorek was retained as head coach of the team. Ftorek holds the dubious distinction of being the only coach to be fired by two different teams in the final days of what was a winning regular season for that team – New Jersey in
1999–2000 and Boston in
2002–03. His record was 41–20–8–5 with the Devils and 33–28–8–4 with the Bruins. In October 2007, Ftorek was hired as the head coach of the
Erie Otters of the
Ontario Hockey League (OHL), replacing
Peter Sidorkiewicz. Ftorek led the Otters to a 15–34–4 record over their final 53 games as the team missed the playoffs for their third consecutive season. In
2008–09, the Otters returned to the post-season as they improved to a 34–29–5 record, earning 73 points. Erie was then eliminated by the
London Knights in the first round of the playoffs. The Otters made their second straight playoff appearance in
2009–10, as they had a record of 33–28–7, earning 73 points once again. Erie was eliminated in the first round once again, as the
Windsor Spitfires swept the Otters in four games. The Otters improved their point total further in
2010–11, winning 40 games, and earned 82 points and a third-straight post-season appearance. Erie took the two-time
Memorial Cup champions Spitfires to seven games before being eliminated. The 2011–12 campaign for Ftorek and the Erie Otters was incredibly dismal, as the Otters dealt with a rebuilding roster after losing many large stars of the previous years, ending the season with the OHL's third-worst season by a single team in its history at 10-52-6. On November 29, 2012, the Otters announced that they had relieved Ftorek of his head coaching duties. On August 7, 2013, the
Calgary Flames hired Ftorek as an assistant coach for their AHL affiliate, the
Abbotsford Heat. On November 29, 2016, Ftorek was named head coach of the
ECHL's
Norfolk Admirals replacing
Rod Aldoff. He was released by the Admirals following an ownership change in 2019. ==Personal life==