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  1. #1
    Silence surpasses speech. duncan228's Avatar
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    http://www.hoophall.com/genrel/040708aaa.html

    NAISMITH MEMORIAL BASKETBALL HALL OF FAME ANNOUNCES SEVEN MEMBERS OF THE CLASS OF 2008

    Three Legendary College and NBA Players, Coach with Five NBA les, Television Personality who Elevated NCAA Basketball, Pioneer Coach in Women's Game and NBA and WNBA Team Owner Comprise Elite Group

    April 7, 2008

    SPRINGFIELD, MA - Hakeem Olajuwon, who led the University of Houston to three straight Final Fours and the Houston Rockets to back-to-back NBA les; Patrick Ewing, who captured the 1984 NCAA le at Georgetown before capturing two Olympic gold medals and becoming an 11 time NBA All-Star; Adrian Dantley, an unstoppable offensive player at Notre Dame and in the NBA, Pat Riley, who has led two NBA teams to five NBA championships; women's basketball pioneer and Immaculata University coach Cathy Rush; dynamic ESPN television broadcaster Vitale; and Detroit Pistons and Shock owner Bill Davidson were announced today as the seven members of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2008. The announcement was made today in San Antonio, TX site of the 2008 NCAA Men's Final Four.

    Ewing, Olajuwon and Riley were elected in their first year of consideration for election into the Hall of Fame, while Dantley, Davidson, Rush and Vitale have been named Finalists in prior years.

    To be elected, a Finalist needs 18 of 24 votes from the Honors Committee for election into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. The Class of 2008 will be enshrined during festivities in Springfield, MA September 4-6, 2008. Ticket packages to the 2008 Enshrinement Gala and all Enshrinement Weekend Events are on-sale now and available by calling the Hall of Fame at (413) 781-6500. Additional Enshrinement Weekend information can also be found at www.hoophall.com.

    ADRIAN DANTLEY - Player (Finalist in 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007), a native of Washington, D.C., was one of the most prolific scorers in NBA history. He had a stellar 15-year NBA career with seven different teams (Buffalo Braves, Indiana Pacers, Los Angeles Lakers, Utah Jazz, Detroit Pistons, Dallas Maverick and Milwaukee Bucks), the majority of the time spent with the Jazz (1979-86). At all levels, Dantley enjoyed success - as a scholastic All-America player at DeMatha Catholic High School (Md.), as a collegian at Notre Dame (1973-76), as the leading scorer (19.3 ppg) of the gold medal 1976 Olympic team and as a professional where he was Rookie of the Year in 1977. His 23,177 career points still ranks 23rd all-time in the NBA. He scored 2,223 points in three seasons (25.8) at Notre Dame, ranks second in Irish career scoring and was a unanimous First Team All-America list in 1975 and 1976. In all but four seasons as a professional, Dantley averaged 20 points or better, including topping the 30-point mark four straight years (1981-84). The six-time NBA All-Star (1980-82, 1984-86) was named NBA Comeback Player of the Year in 1984, the year he led the league in scoring (30.6).

    WILLIAM (Bill) DAVIDSON - Contributor (Finalist in 2007), 85, is a lifelong Michigan resident born in Detroit, where he has created both NBA and WNBA dynasties. An owner of the Pistons since 1974 and the WNBA Shock since 1998, Davidson's Pistons have captured three NBA crowns to go along with two WNBA les for the Shock. Davidson has served as Chairman of the NBA Board of Governors, and has been an innovative business leader in the sports industry - building the revolutionary Palace of Auburn Hills, playing an integral role in structuring modern NBA salary cap and free agency standards, and even owning the NHL's Tampa Bay Lightning and capturing a Stanley Cup. His Pistons have featured several Hall of Famers, including Isiah Thomas, Joe Dumars, Chuck Daly and Larry Brown.

    PATRICK EWING - Player, a two-time Olympic gold medal winner (1984, 1992) and a three-time consensus First Team All-America (1983, 1984, 1985), led Georgetown University to three appearances in the NCAA Final Four and the 1984 national championship earning Most Outstanding Player recognition for his efforts. The 1986 NBA Rookie of the Year landed a spot on 11 NBA All Star rosters including ten in a row from 1988 to 1997. A member of the NBA 50th Anniversary Team, Ewing scored 24,815 points during his 17-year NBA career to go along with 11,607 rebounds. Named Parade Magazine's National High School Player of the Year in 1981, Ewing remains the New York Knicks all-time leader in points, rebounds, blocked shots, steals and field goals made.

    HAKEEM OLAJUWON - Player, a native of Lagos, Nigeria, spent the lion's share of his basketball career in Houston, Texas where he led the Houston Rockets to back-to-back NBA championships in 1994 and 1995 and the University of Houston to three consecutive Final Four appearances from 1982 to 1984. A two-time Defensive Player of the Year, Olajuwon still holds the NBA record for blocked shots (3,830) and is the only player to record more than 3,000 blocked shots and 2,000 steals in a career. Olajuwon was also a five-time member of the NBA All-Defensive First Team, a six-time All-NBA First Team performer, and the 1994 NBA MVP. He recorded 26,946 points and 13,748 rebounds in 18 NBA seasons, good for ninth and fourteenth respectively on the all-time NBA leader board.

    PAT RILEY - Coach, has experienced success at all levels and in all realms of the game. A player on the 1966 University of Kentucky Final Four team, Riley has left his biggest mark on the game in coaching. Riley is a three-time NBA Coach of the Year and currently ranks third on the all-time wins list in NBA history behind Lenny Wilkens and Don Nelson. His greatest achievements have come in the form of five NBA championships, including four as the head coach of the Los Angeles Lakers (1982, 1985, 1987, 1988) and a fifth patrolling the sidelines for the Miami Heat in 2005. He is a member of the NBA's Ten Best Coaches of All-Time and is the only coach in history to win NBA Coach of the Year honors with three different teams.

    CATHY RUSH - Coach (Finalist in 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2005), a pioneer in women's basketball and an advocate for women's sports, led Immaculata University to three consecutive AIAW national championships from 1972 to 1974. Rush propelled Immaculata, and women's basketball, into the national spotlight when the Mighty Macs appeared on national television in 1975, a first for women's basketball. Rush won 149 games in only seven season and lost only 15, good for a .908 winning percentage. She made six consecutive appearances in the AIAW Final Four (1972-1977) and for her accomplishments was enshrined into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2000.

    VITALE - Contributor (Finalist in 2004, 2006), a native of Passaic, NJ, has been synonymous with college basketball for more than 20 years as the lead color announcer for ESPN. A successful coach at the high school (East Rutherford), collegiate (University of Detroit) and professional (Detroit Pistons) levels, Vitale began his broadcasting career with ESPN in 1979 and has helped make the network an integral part of college basketball's popularity. His enthusiastic, upbeat style has resulted in a lexicon of now-familiar phrases as "Get a TO," "Awesome, Baby," and "PTP-er." An author of six books chronicling his love affair with basketball, Vitale was recipient of the Basketball Hall of Fame's Curt Gowdy electronic media award (1988) and won the NABC Cliff Wells Appreciation Award in 2000.

  2. #2
    adolis is altuve’s father monosylab1k's Avatar
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    Pat Riley & Vitale made it........vomit.....

  3. #3
    Optomistic but Realistic MrChug's Avatar
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    Kinda mad that my idol (see left) didn't make it but he was a finalist. If the GSW make a name for themselves, I'm sure he'll ge a bit of notariety (sp*?) in the next few years and maybe get more recognition for his playing career.

  4. #4
    So what gives Roxsfan's Avatar
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    congrats dream

  5. #5
    Murdering Prostitutes Findog's Avatar
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    Nellie got robbed!

  6. #6
    🏆🏆🏆🏆🏆 ElNono's Avatar
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    Can they also add Riley to the Hall of Shame in the same ceremony for the tanking job he's doing in Miami?

  7. #7
    Veteran mojorizen7's Avatar
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    Olajuwon was the best center i ever saw play. I'm too young to include Chamberlain/Russell. I did see the last years of Jabbars career but i would still put "The Dream" up there.

  8. #8
    Europe's #1 Spurs Fan alamo50's Avatar
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    Pretty damn impressive class.
    Next year will top it by far: MJ, Admiral and Stockton.

  9. #9
    Since 1992 Brutalis's Avatar
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    Pretty damn impressive class.
    Next year will top it by far: MJ, Admiral and Stockton.
    Yep.

  10. #10
    Get Refuel! FromWayDowntown's Avatar
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    Pretty damn impressive class.
    Next year will top it by far: MJ, Admiral and Stockton.
    Agreed. I'll be shocked if any of those guys isn't in on the first ballot. I wonder, too, about some borderline Hall of Fame guys that are eligible next year -- I don't think Tim Hardaway will have the juice to get there in his first year of eligibility, but Arvydas Sabonis might based on his prowess as an international player.

    Add in the finalists from this year who didn't get in, specifically Dennis Johnson, Chris Mullin, and Don Nelson, and the class of 2009 should be a really special one.

    It's too bad, in a very selfish sense, that next year's Final Four wasn't the one to be played in San Antonio -- the roof of the Alamodome might have been torn off at halftime if David Robinson was introduced. (They introduced the new class at halftime last night).

  11. #11
    adolis is altuve’s father monosylab1k's Avatar
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    I don't think Tim Hardaway will have the juice to get there in his first year of eligibility
    After those unfortunate comments, does he get in at all?

    The Basketball HOF has always been way too easy to get into anyways. It ought to be the Hall Of Pretty Good.

  12. #12
    Veteran dbreiden83080's Avatar
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    Congrats to Ewing, who was my fav player as a kid, great career, no championship but still a great career.




  13. #13
    Double facepalm...
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    Pat Riley & Vitale made it........vomit.....
    I 2nd this post.

  14. #14
    Veteran dbreiden83080's Avatar
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    Riley is deserving, Vitale, WTF did he do to get in other than yell BABY!!! all the time??

  15. #15
    Get Refuel! FromWayDowntown's Avatar
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    After those unfortunate comments, does he get in at all?

    The Basketball HOF has always been way too easy to get into anyways. It ought to be the Hall Of Pretty Good.
    I actually think the Basketball HOF is more selective -- at least with regard to NBA players -- than the Baseball Hall of Fame. Since 2000, there are only 15 players with NBA ties who've been enshrined. By my count, there are now 85 NBA/ABA players who are enshrined in Springfield as players; of those 44 were on the 50 Greatest Players list in 1997. Of those who weren't on the 50 Greatest players list, several (Bill Bradley, Tom Gola, Gail Goodrich, David Thompson, Dan Issel, Calvin Murphy, Connie Hawkins, to name a few) are in for things they did as players in college (it is, after all, the Basketball Hall of Fame -- not even the Pro Basketball Hall of Fame) or in other settings. I'd say the Hall is pretty selective when it comes to NBA players.

    If I had a vote, Tim Hardaway wouldn't have a chance, mostly because I always considered him a good but not great player. But if you believe something like basketball-reference's Hall of Fame probability metric, Hardaway's resume makes him among the 100 most likely players in the history of the NBA to end up in Springfield -- more likely than guys like Dennis Johnson, Joe Dumars (who is in), and Bernard King.

  16. #16
    The Greatest Show on Earth LakeShow's Avatar
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    Olajuwon is my second favorite player of all time, with Magic Johnson being my favorite player, of course. He was an absolute beast during his days.

  17. #17
    Veteran candyc76@yahoo.com's Avatar
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    Yay congrats dream

  18. #18
    Esse quam videri ploto's Avatar
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    "He's the best post player I've ever seen and ever competed against,'' Rasho Nesterovic said yesterday, a day after Olajuwon was named to basketball's Hall of Fame.

    http://torontosun.com/Sports/Basketb...33291-sun.html

  19. #19
    Believe.
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    Pat Riley & Vitale made it........vomit.....
    Same thing i was saying about the deepthroat dirk this years playoffs makes the 3rd year in the row he chokes .

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