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List of members of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame

The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame, located in Springfield, Massachusetts, honors players who have shown exceptional skill at basketball, all-time great coaches, referees, and other major contributors to the sport. It is named after James Naismith, who conceived the sport in 1891; he was inducted into the Hall as a contributor in 1959.[1] To be considered for induction, nominees must meet certain prerequisites. Players must have been retired for at least three years before becoming eligible. Referees must have either been retired for at least three years, or, if they are still active, have officiated for at least 25 years at high-school-level programs or higher. Coaches must have either been retired for at least three years, or, if they are still active, have coached for at least 25 years at high-school-level programs or higher and from 2020 on must have coached for at least 25 years and reached the age of sixty years.[2] Those being considered for induction as contributors may be inducted at any time; the Hall of Fame and its committees evaluate whether contributions are significant enough for the nominee to be inducted as a contributor.[3] Teams are also inducted at the committees' discretion.

Members Edit

Coaches Edit

As part of the inaugural class of 1959, three coaches were inducted (Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, Henry Clifford Carlson and Walter E. Meanwell); in total, 100 coaches have been inducted into the Hall of Fame. Ten of the inducted coaches were born outside the United States: Cesare Rubini (Italy, 1994), Alexander Gomelsky (Soviet Union, now Russia, 1995), Antonio Díaz-Miguel (Spain, 1997), Aleksandar "Aca" Nikolić (Yugoslavia, now Serbia, 1998), Geno Auriemma (Italy, 2006), Alessandro "Sandro" Gamba (Italy, 2006), Mirko Novosel (Yugoslavia, now Croatia, 2007), Pedro Ferrándiz (Spain, 2007), Lidia Alexeeva (Soviet Union, now Russia, 2012), and Lindsay Gaze (Australia, 2015).[4] Six of them have won championships in the EuroLeague or its historic predecessor, the FIBA European Champions Cup. Ten of the inducted coaches are women: L. Margaret Wade (1985), Jody Conradt (1998), Pat Head Summitt (2000), Sandra Kay Yow (2002), Sue Gunter (2005), Cathy Rush (2008), C. Vivian Stringer (2009), Tara VanDerveer (2011), Alexeeva (2012), and Sylvia Hatchell (2013). Five coaches have also been inducted as players: John Wooden, Bill Sharman, Lenny Wilkens, Tom Heinsohn, and Bill Russell.[4] The most recent coaches to be inducted are Tom Izzo and John McLendon; the latter, inducted as a contributor in 1979, is the first individual to be inducted separately as a coach and contributor.[5]

Most of the inductees have been college head coaches. Thirty-two have led a team to the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) men's championship and six have led a team to the NCAA women's championship. Twenty inductees have coached in the National Basketball Association (NBA). Twelve of them have won at least one NBA championship as head coaches; one other, Don Nelson, has five NBA championships as a player. Additionally, Bobby "Slick" Leonard won three titles in the former American Basketball Association. Larry Brown is the only inductee to coach both a college basketball team and a professional basketball team to a title, having coached the Kansas Jayhawks (NCAA) and the Detroit Pistons (NBA) to championships.

Six coaching inductees have received the Hall's John Bunn Award, given annually for significant contributions to the sport—Red Auerbach, Henry Iba, Ray Meyer, Summitt, Wooden, and Morgan Wootten.

Twelve inductees have, either before or after their induction, won an Olympic medal coaching a men's national team to a top-three finish in the Olympic tournament. Eight coached the U.S. national team, while the other four coached foreign national teams. Six inductees—Summitt, Yow, Auriemma, Van Chancellor, VanDerveer, and Alexeeva—have led a women's national team to a top-three finish in the Olympics. Alexeeva led the Soviet Union to two golds, while all the others led the United States to gold medals (Auriemma after his induction, the others before being inducted).

Six individuals inducted as coaches were associated with teams that have been inducted to the Hall as units. Donald L. "Don" Haskins, inducted in 1997, was the head coach of the 1966 Texas Western basketball team, which was inducted into the Hall in 2007. Chuck Daly, inducted in 1994, was the head coach of the "Dream Team", the USA team at the 1992 Olympics that featured 11 Hall of Fame players and was inducted as a unit in 2010. Wilkens, inducted as a coach in 1998, and Mike Krzyzewski, inducted in 2001, were Daly's assistants in 1992. Dutch Lonborg, inducted in 1973, was team manager for the 1960 U.S. men's Olympic team that was also inducted as a unit in 2010. Cathy Rush, inducted in 2008, was the head coach of the Immaculata College women's team of 1972–1974 that was inducted in 2014.[6]

Contributors Edit

For a person to be inducted to the Basketball Hall of Fame as a contributor, they must have made "significant contributions to the game of basketball".[3] Of the inaugural Hall of Fame class of 1959, seven individuals were inducted as contributors, including James Naismith, the inventor of basketball. All former NBA commissioners (Maurice Podoloff, J. Walter Kennedy, Larry O'Brien, and David Stern) have been inducted. Seventeen individuals inducted as contributors have won the John Bunn Award, awarded by the Hall annually to a significant contributor: John Bunn (its inaugural recipient), J. Walter Kennedy, Cliff Fagan, Edward Gottlieb, Danny Biasone, Larry O'Brien, Dave Gavitt, C. M. Newton, Tex Winter, Meadowlark Lemon, Tom Jernstedt, Tom "Satch" Sanders, Val Ackerman, George Raveling,[4] Al Attles, Rod Thorn and Del Harris. Four inductees in this category are women: Senda Berenson Abbott and Bertha Teague (both inducted in 1985), Rebecca Lobo (2017) and Val Ackerman (2021).[7]

The exact number of individuals enshrined as contributors (as well as the number of player inductees) is subject to debate because of the Hall's treatment of 2014 inductee Nathaniel "Sweetwater" Clifton, one of the first African Americans to play in the NBA. While he was initially announced as a contributor,[8] the Hall now classifies him as a player inductee.[9]

Six inductees in this category were associated with teams that have been inducted to the Hall as units. Naismith organized The First Team, the group of players involved in the first-ever basketball game in 1891 and also inducted as part of the inaugural Class of 1959. Robert L. Douglas, inducted in 1972, was the founder and owner of the New York Renaissance, inducted in 1963. Pete Newell, inducted in 1979, was the head coach of the 1960 U.S. Olympic team inducted in 2010. Three were associated with the Harlem Globetrotters, inducted in 2002. Abe Saperstein, inducted in 1971, was the team's founder and owner. Kennedy, although best known for his time as NBA commissioner, had been the Globetrotters' public relations director in the 1950s. Lemon, inducted in 2003, was one of the team's most enduring on-court stars.

Ten individuals inducted in this category were born outside the United States—Naismith and Newell in Canada, Podoloff and Gottlieb in modern-day Ukraine (part of the Russian Empire when they were born in 1890 and 1898 respectively), Douglas in Saint Kitts and Nevis (part of the British West Indies at his birth in 1882), Saperstein in the United Kingdom, Biasone and Renato William Jones in Italy, Ferenc Hepp in modern-day Hungary (Austria-Hungary at his birth in 1909), and Borislav Stanković in what is now Bosnia and Herzegovina (the Kingdom of Yugoslavia at his birth in 1925).

In total 81 individuals have been inducted as contributors.

 
Luther Gulick, inducted in 1959
 
Amos Alonzo Stagg, inducted in 1959
Year Inductee Achievements Ref.
1959 Luther H. Gulick Head of Physical Education at School for Christian Workers (1887–1900); Chairman of Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) Basketball Committee (1895–1905) [10]
1959 Edward J. "Ed" Hickox Represented New England in Olympic Trials (Springfield College, 1936); five New England championships (Springfield College); Board of Directors of Basketball Hall of Fame (1959–66); National Association of Basketball Coaches (NABC) historian (1944–66) [11]
1959 Ralph Morgan Founded Collegiate Basketball Rules Committee (1905); Secretary and Treasurer of Rules Committee (1905–31); Founded Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball League (now the Ivy League) (1910); Secretary and Treasurer of Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball League (1910–31) [12]
1959 James Naismith Physical education instructor (Springfield College, 1890–95); invented the game of "basket ball", (now called basketball); developed basketball's original 13 rules; physical education professor (Kansas, 1917–37), FIBA Hall of Fame (2007) [13]
1959 Harold G. Olsen Big Ten Championships (Ohio State; 1925, 1933, 1939, 1944, 1946); helped found NCAA tournament (1939); Chairman of NCAA Rules Committee; first Coach of Basketball Association of America's (BAA) Chicago Stags (1946–49) [14]
1959 Amos Alonzo Stagg Played in the first public basketball game at Springfield and scored the team's only basket in a 5–1 loss; 7 Big Ten titles during late 19th century and early 20th century (Chicago) [15]
1959 Oswald Tower Member of Basketball Rules Committee (1910–60); Editor of Official Basketball Guide (1915–60); official rules interpreter (1915–60); coach of Wilbraham (MA) Academy (1907–10) [16]
1960 Henry V. Porter First representative for high schools on the National Basketball Rules Committee; pioneered use of motion pictures to study proper playing techniques; edited the first high school rule book (1936); edited the first state high school association publication, the Illinois High School Athlete [17]
1961 John J. O'Brien President, Metropolitan Basketball League (1922–28, 1931–33); President and chairman of the board, American Basketball League (1928–31, 1933–53); dedicated to the advancement of professional basketball in the East; supporter of referees and one of the first league administrators to begin fining players [18]
1961 Arthur A. Schabinger Officiated in the Missouri Valley Conference, Big Eight, Kansas and Missouri Conferences, and the national AAU championships; one of the founders of the NABC; author of the NABC's Constitution and By-Laws, and designer of its emblem; promoted the adoption of molded basketball by colleges [19]
1961 Arthur L. Trester Commissioner of Indiana High School Athletic Association (1922–44); coach and referee in Indiana; known as the "Czar" of Indiana high school athletics [20]
1962 Frank Morgenweck Operated and coached professional teams in 14 cities in the National, New England, Western Massachusetts, Hudson River, Central, New York State, Inter-State, Metropolitan, Eastern States, and American leagues (1901–32); National League championship (Camden, 1904); Metropolitan League championships (Patterson, 1923; Kingston, 1928) [21]
1962 Lynn W. St. John Lobbied for formal national and international rules for amateur basketball for three decades; served on NCAA Rules Committee with James Naismith (1912–37); Chairman, Rules Committee (1919–37); Member, Olympic Basketball Committee (1936) [22]
1963 William A. Reid Director of athletics, University of Detroit (1919); Director of athletics, Colgate University (1936–55); President, Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference (ECAC) (1944–45); Director ECAC Executive Council (1945–49) [23]
1964 John W. Bunn Coached Stanford to Pacific Coast Conference championships (1936–38); Helms Athletic Foundation Championship (Stanford, 1937); Chairman, Basketball Hall of Fame (1949–63); Editor, College Guide and Official Rules Interpreter (1959–60). John Bunn Award (1973). [24]
1964 Edward S. "Ned" Irish Basketball director, Madison Square Garden (1934); integral in formation of BAA (1946); founded the New York Knicks (1946); President, New York Knicks (1946–74) [25]
1964 R. William Jones Co-founded the International Amateur Basketball Federation (FIBA) (1932); organized men's and women's European Championships (1935–63); organized men's and women's World Championships (1950–63); organized Olympic Basketball Tournament (1936–60), FIBA Hall of Fame (2007) [26]
1965 Walter A. Brown President of the Boston Garden (1937–64); founded the Boston Celtics (1946); Celtics owner (1946–64); spearheaded the formation of the NBA (1949); President of the International Ice Hockey Federation [27]
1965 Paul D. "Tony" Hinkle Helms Athletic Foundation Championship (Butler, 1924, 1929); President, NABC (1954–55); Chairman, Rules Committee of the National Basketball Committee of U.S. and Canada; coached the Great Lakes Navy teams during World War II [28]
1965 William G. "Bill" Mokray Started concept of college basketball doubleheaders at the Boston Garden (1944–45); first Chairman of the Hall of Fame Honors Committee (1959–64); owned the world's largest basketball library; considered the number-one authority on the game's history [29]
1968 Clair F. Bee Influential in the development of 3-second rule; developed the 1-3-1 zone defense; National Invitation Tournament (NIT) championship (Long Island University, 1939, 1941); Author, Chip Hilton's Sports Stories for Young People'; Coach of the Baltimore Bullets (1952–54) [30]
1969 Charles H. "Chuck" Taylor Shoe salesman; Organized first basketball clinic at North Carolina State University (1922); developed the popular Converse Basketball Yearbook (1922); selected All-America teams (1932); The Chuck Taylor "All-Star" was the official shoe of the Olympics (1936–68) [31]
1971 Abraham M. "Abe" Saperstein Owner of the Harlem Globetrotters. Saperstein's Globetrotters played before 55 million fans in 87 countries; the Globetrotters were part of the first basketball sellout ever at Madison Square Garden; led the Globetrotters to the World Professional Title (1940); won the International Cup with the Globetrotters (1943–44) [32]
1972 Robert L. "Bob" Douglas Owned and coached New York Renaissance (1922–49); World Professional Championship with Renaissance (1939); known as "The Father of Black Professional Basketball" [33]
1972 Edward "Ed" Gottlieb BAA Championship (Philadelphia Warriors, 1947); NBA Championship (Philadelphia Warriors, 1956); Coach and Owner of Warriors (1946–55 and 1946–62); Chairman of NBA Rules Committee for 25 years; served as NBA schedule maker for 30 years. John Bunn Award (1979). [34]
1972 W.R. Clifford "Cliff" Wells 50 district, regional, and invitational tournaments, including two championships (Indiana state; 1919, 1934); first President, Indiana High School Coaching Association; member of National Rules Committee (1952–56); first full-time executive secretary and director of Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame (1963–66) [35]
1973 Elmer H. Ripley 2 NCAA Tournament (Georgetown; 1941, 1943); Eastern Championship (Georgetown, 1943); Israeli Olympic team coach (Melbourne, 1956); Canadian Olympic team coach (Rome, 1960) [36]
1974 Harry A. Fisher 2 Helms Athletic Foundation Championship (Columbia; 1904–05); Helms Athletic Foundation All-America (Columbia; 1904–05); Eastern Intercollegiate League championship (Columbia; 1911–12, 1914); editor of Collegiate Guide (1905–15) [37]
1974 Maurice Podoloff Served as NBA's first commissioner (1949–63); negotiated NBA's first TV contract (1954); arranged for construction and use of the first 24-second clock (1954); NBA's MVP Award is named in his honor [38]
1975 Emil S. Liston 2 Kansas Conference Championship (Baker University; 1930, 1937); President of Kansas Conference Coaches Association (1936–38); created National Association of Intercollegiate Basketball (NAIB)/National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) tournament (1937); served as NAIA executive secretary (1940–49) [39]
1979 John B. McLendon 3 NAIA championship (Tennessee State; 1957–59); NAIA Coach of the Year (1958); 8 CIAA championships (1941, 1943–44, 1946–47, 1949–50, 1952); first African-American coach with Cleveland Pipers of the American Basketball League, later coach of the Denver Rockets (ABA) [40]
1979 Peter F. "Pete" Newell NCAA Championship (California; 1959); NIT Championship (San Francisco, 1949); Olympic Gold Medal (Rome, 1960) with the 1960 United States Olympic Team inducted as a unit in 2010; National Coach of the Year (1960), FIBA Hall of Fame (2009) [41]
1980 Lester "Les" Harrison Organized Rochester Seagrams, Ebers, and Pros (1920s–40s); Owner of Rochester Royals (1945–1958); NBA championship (Rochester Royals, 1951); instrumental in formation of NBA (1949); organized Kodak Classic Collegiate Tournament (now Rochester Basketball Classic) [42]
1981 Ferenc Hepp Member of FIBA Technical Commission (1948–56); President of Hungarian Basketball Federation (1954); member of FIBA Central Board (1956); member of FIBA Commission of Finances and Amateurism (1960–80), FIBA Hall of Fame (2007) [43]
1981 James Walter Kennedy Public Relations Director (BAA/NBA; 1946–51); Public Relations Director (Harlem Globetrotters, 1950s); NBA Commissioner (1963–75); John Bunn Award (1975); NBA named their citizenship award in his honor [44]
1982 Alva O. Duer NAIB Finals appearance (Pepperdine; 1945); Director and founder of NAIB/NAIA National Basketball Championship Tournament (1949–75); member of U.S. Basketball Association Ethics Committee (1960–64); Board of Directors, U.S. Olympic Committee [45]
1983 Louis G. Wilke Chairman, AAU Basketball Committee, seven terms; Chairman and team manager, Olympic Basketball Committee (1948); Executive board member, U.S. Olympic Committee (1956, 1960); Vice-chairman, Pan American Federation and FIBA Rules Committee (1962) [46]
1984 Clifford B. "Cliff" Fagan Executive Secretary of Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association (1947–57); Secretary of National Basketball Rules Committee (1958–77); executive director of the National Federation of State High School Athletic Associations (1958–77); member of U.S. Olympic Committee Board of Directors (1961–76). John Bunn Award (1977). [47]
1984 Edward S. "Ed" Steitz Instrumental in the reinstatement of the dunk (1976); eliminated jump ball with the exception of the start of the game and overtime (1981); advocate of the 45-second shot clock and three-point shot (1985); NIT Selection Committee (1962–68), FIBA Hall of Fame (2007) [48]
1985 Senda Berenson Abbott Director of Physical Education (Smith College; 1892–11); organized first women's game at Smith College (March 22, 1893); author, Basketball Guide for Women (1901–07); Chairperson, Basketball Committee for Women (1905–17) [49]
1985 Bertha F. Teague 8 Oklahoma state championships and 7 runners-up; compiled 36 20-plus win seasons, including 28 consecutive (1930–57); founded the first girls' basketball clinic and camp in the Southwest; coach of the Decade (1930s, 1940s, 1960s) by Jim Thorpe Athletic Awards Committee (1974) [50]
1991 Lawrence "Larry" Fleisher NBA Players Association general counsel (1963–87); developed free-agent system (1976); established antidrug agreement; involved in ABA–NBA merger [51]
1991 Lawrence F. "Larry" O'Brien NBA Commissioner (1975–84); The Sporting News Sportsman of the Year (1976); created NBA college scholarship program (1980); developed antidrug program (1984); President, Basketball Hall of Fame (1985–87). John Bunn Award (1984). [52]
1991 Borislav "Boris" Stankovic Italian national championship (Oransoda team, 1968); oversaw the introduction of the three-point line in international competition; overseen reorganization of FIBA into zonal administration system; member of International Olympic Committee, FIBA Hall of Fame (2007) [53]
1999 Wayne R. Embry Five-time NBA All-Star (1961–65); NBA championship (Boston Celtics, 1968); first African American NBA general manager (Milwaukee Bucks, 1971–79); later GM of the Cleveland Cavaliers; The Sporting News NBA Executive of the Year (1992, 1998) [54]
1999 Fred Zollner Owner of the Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons/Detroit Pistons (1941–1974); NBL championship (Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons, 1944–45); key figure in the merger of the BAA and NBL to form the NBA; NBA Finals appearance (Fort Wayne Pistons, 1955–56); named "Mr. Pro Basketball" at the 1975 Silver Anniversary All-Star Game [55]
2000 Daniel "Danny" Biasone President and founder (Syracuse Nationals, 1946–63); inventor of 24-second shot clock (1954); NBA championship (Syracuse Nationals, 1955); John Bunn Award (1982) [56]
2000 Charles Martin Newton NCAA Championship (Kentucky, 1951); Southeastern Conference (SEC) Coach of the Year (1972 and 1976 with Alabama, 1988 and 1989 with Vanderbilt); President, USA Basketball (1992–96); John Bunn Award (1997) [57]
2003 Francis D. "Chick" Hearn Los Angeles Lakers broadcaster; Three-time National Sportscaster of the Year (1959, 1965, 1987); Curt Gowdy Media Award (1992); Emmy Award for Excellence in Basketball Coverage (1965); Star on Hollywood Walk of Fame (1986) [58]
2003 Meadowlark Lemon Longtime player for the Harlem Globetrotters; John Bunn Award (1998); played in more than 16,000 games; known as the "Clown Prince of Basketball" [59]
2003 Earl F. Lloyd CIAA "Player of the Decade" for the 1940s; NAIA Silver and Golden Anniversary Teams; first African American to play in an NBA game (1950);[60] NBA Championship Team (1955); first African American bench coach (1968) [61]
2004 Jerry Colangelo Owner and GM of the Phoenix Suns; The Sporting News NBA Executive of the Year (1976, 1981, 1989, 1993); youngest general manager in professional sports (1968); enshrined in Illinois Basketball Hall of Fame (1995); former Chairman and CEO of the Arizona Diamondbacks; GM of the U.S. Men's National Basketball team (2005–present) [62]
2005 Hubert "Hubie" Brown Coach of the Atlanta Hawks; New York Knicks and Memphis Grizzlies; Two-time NBA Coach of the Year (1978, 2004); ABA Championship (Kentucky Colonels, 1975); Curt Gowdy Media Award (2000); nominated for a Sports Emmy (1994, 1999) [63]
2006 Dave Gavitt Coach, 1980 United States Olympic Team; five-time New England Coach of the Year; founder of the Big East Conference; John Bunn Lifetime Achievement Award (1987); Naismith Outstanding Contribution to Basketball Award winner (1993) [64]
2008 William Davidson Principal owner, Detroit Pistons (1974–2009); NBA championships (Detroit Pistons, 1989–90, 2004); Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) championships (Detroit Shock, 2003, 2006, 2008); first owner in North American sports history to win championships in three different major professional leagues (NBA, WNBA, and National Hockey League (NHL)) [65]
2008 Richard "Dick" Vitale ESPN Broadcaster; Sports Personality of the Year by the American Sportscasters Association (1989); Curt Gowdy Media Award (1998); NABC Cliff Wells Appreciation Award (2000); Books include Time Out Baby!, Campus Chaos, Living a Dream and Holding Court [66]
2010 Jerry Buss Owner of the Los Angeles Lakers (1979–2013) and Los Angeles Sparks (1997–2006); 10 NBA championships (Lakers, 1980, 1982, 1985, 1987–88, 2000–02, 2009–10); 2 WNBA championships (Sparks, 2001–02) [67]
2011 Tom "Satch" Sanders Player with the Boston Celtics (1960–73); 8 NBA championships (1961–66, 1968, 1969); later coach of the Celtics and Harvard University; key developer of the NBA's Rookie Transition Program and founder of many of the league's player programs; John Bunn Award (2007) [68]
2011 Tex Winter Architect of the triangle offense; two NCAA Final Fours at Kansas State University (1958, 1964); UPI National Coach of the Year (1958); NABC president, 1982–83; nine NBA titles as an assistant (Chicago Bulls, 19911993, 19961998; Los Angeles Lakers, 20002002); John Bunn Award (1998) [69]
2012 Donald "Don" Barksdale First African American to be named to a major college All-America team (Helms Foundation, 1947, with UCLA); first African American to play for and win Olympic gold with Team USA (1948); first African American to play in the NBA All-Star Game (1953) [70]
2012 Phil Knight Co-founder of Nike, "credited with expanding the game of basketball around the world through its innovative products and influential marketing" and "the first sports brand to incorporate top athletes to connect with consumers emotionally" [71]
2013 Russ Granik NBA executive from 1976 to 2006, "involved in every major negotiation including television contracts, collective bargaining, and league expansion" during his tenure; also president of USA Basketball who helped oversee the inclusion of NBA players in the 1992 Olympic "Dream Team" [72]
2013 Edwin Bancroft Henderson Dubbed the "Father of Black Basketball"; introduced the sport to the black community in Washington, D.C., in the early 20th century and formed many organizations to govern and promote the sport among African Americans [73]
2014 Nathaniel "Sweetwater" Clifton First African American player to sign an NBA contract who caught on with a team; one-time NBA All-Star (1957); also played with two Hall of Fame teams in the New York Renaissance and Harlem Globetrotters; 1978 inductee in the Black Athletes Hall of Fame [74]
2014 David Stern NBA commissioner from 1984 to 2014, during which time the league expanded by seven teams and signed several lucrative TV deals. Also responsible for the creation of the WNBA, the draft lottery, and several league outreach organizations. FIBA Hall of Fame (2016). [75]
2015 George Raveling Longtime college coach and broadcaster who served on the boards of many major basketball organizations, among them the NABC, NCAA, USA Basketball, and Nike, also serving as Nike's director of grassroots and international basketball. John Bunn Award (2013). [76]
2016 Jerry Reinsdorf Owner and chairman of the Chicago Bulls since 1985, turning the franchise into a lucrative business that won six NBA Championships in the 1990s (1991–1993 and 1996–1998) [77]
2017 Rebecca Lobo She was a member of the NCAA National Champion Connecticut Huskies (1995). She won several awards including; AP Female Athlete of the Year, the Wade Trophy, the Naismith Award, WBCA National Player of the Year and USBWA National Player of the Year. [78]
2017 Mannie Jackson A Harlem Globetrotters star, He saved the team from extinction by buying it and becoming its CEO from 1993 to 2007. Mannie Jackson is the First African-American to own a major International sports and entertainment organization. He was also the Chairman of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame (2007-2009). [79]
2017 Tom Jernstedt An NCAA administrator with a career of 38 years. He formerly played for Oregon Ducks as a quarterback. He helped in increasing the revenue of NCAA Basketball television contract from $1.2 billion when he arrived to $10.8 billion when he left in 2010. John Bunn Award (2001). [80]
2017 Jerry Krause Was Executive Vice President & general manager of the Chicago Bulls during their Michael Jordan-led dynasty years. Won 6 NBA championships as Bulls' GM (1991, 1992, 1993, 1996, 1997, 1998), and also won the NBA Executive of the Year Award twice (1988 & 1996). [81]
2018 Rod Thorn Player, coach, general manager and league executive. 2002 NBA Executive of the Year. John Bunn Award (2015). [82]
2018 Rick Welts President and Chief Executive Officer of the Phoenix Suns (2002-2011), and the Golden State Warriors (2011-2021)
Won 3 NBA championships as Warriors' President (2015, 2017, 2018) in a 5 year span (2015-2019).
2019 Al Attles 1975 NBA champion as a coach for the Warriors. No. 16 retired by the Golden State Warriors. No. 22 retired by North Carolina A&T. John Bunn Award (2014).
2020 Patrick Baumann Secretary General of the FIBA (2003–2018). Primarily focused on the youth sector and the expansion of 3x3 basketball as a global game, while developing programs and events to grow basketball worldwide.
2021 Val Ackerman Widely regarded as a trailblazing basketball executive and significant contributor to women's and men's basketball on the collegiate, professional and international level. Served as WNBA President from the league’s inception in 1996 to 2005, and USA Basketball’s first female President from 2005 to 2008. Since 2013, led the BIG EAST Conference as Commissioner, launching several initiatives including BIG EAST Serves, the Digital Network, the Student-Athlete Well-Being Forum, and winning two NCAA basketball national championships (Villanova 2016, 2018). A recipient of the John Bunn Lifetime Achievement Award (2008), the Edward Steitz Award (2013) and the Women’s Sports Foundation Billie Jean King Award (2016), as well as an enshrinee of the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame (2011). [83]
2021 Lowell "Cotton" Fitzsimmons College and NBA coach. Won two national championships (1966,1967) with Moberly Junior College. Coach of the Buffalo Braves, Kansas City Kings, Atlanta Hawks, San Antonio Spurs and Phoenix Suns, winning 832 games. Two-time NBA Coach of the Year (1979, 1989). [84]
2021 Howard Garfinkel Co-founder and longtime director of Five-Star Basketball Camp, which revolutionized scouting, recruiting, and coaching development. Five-Star’s drill-station style became the standard for basketball camps and countless participants went on to play in the NBA. Prior to Five-Star, he started High School Basketball Illustrated in 1965, the first high school scouting report. He was inducted into the Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame in 2013.
2022 Lawrence "Larry" Costello Player and coach. Played for the Philadelphia Warriors, Syracuse Nationals/Philadelphia 76ers and Wilkes-Barre Barons (1954-1968). Coached the Milwaukee Bucks, Chicago Bulls, Milwaukee Does and Utica College (1968-1987). NBA champion as a player with the 76ers in 1967. NBA champion as a coach with the Bucks in 1971. Six-time NBA All-Star. [85]
2022 Delmer "Del" Harris Coach or assistant coach at the collegiate, professional and international levels from 1965-2012, including six NBA teams. Named 1995 Coach of the Year with the Los Angeles Lakers. John Bunn Award (2019). [86]

Players Edit

As part of the inaugural class of 1959, four players were inducted, including George Mikan, who was the first NBA player to be enshrined. In total, 177 or 178 players, depending on Nathaniel Clifton's classification, have been inducted into the Hall of Fame. Of these, 110 or 111, again depending on Clifton's classification, have played in the NBA.[5] The 1993 class had the most player inductees, with eight. No players were inducted in 1965, 1967, 1968 and 2007. Five players have also been inducted as coaches: John Wooden in 1973, Lenny Wilkens in 1998, Bill Sharman in 2004, Tom Heinsohn in 2015, and Bill Russell in 2021.[87]

Twenty-seven player inductees are women: Lusia Harris-Stewart (1992), Nera D. White (1992), Ann E. Meyers (1993), Uļjana Semjonova (1993), Carol A. Blazejowski (1994), Anne T. Donovan (1994), Cheryl Miller (1995), Nancy I. Lieberman (1996), Joan Crawford (1997), Denise M. Curry (1997), Lynette Woodard (2004), Hortência de Fatima Marcari (2005), Cynthia Cooper-Dyke (2010), Teresa Edwards (2011), Katrina McClain Johnson (2012), Dawn Staley (2013), Lisa Leslie (2015), Sheryl Swoopes (2016),[5] Rebecca Lobo (2017), Katie Smith (2018), Tina Thompson (2018),[88] Teresa Weatherspoon (2019), Tamika Catchings (2020), Yolanda Griffith (2021), Lauren Jackson (2021), Pearl Moore (2021) and Theresa Grentz (2022). Among these, Lieberman, Woodard, Cooper-Dyke, Edwards, Staley, Leslie, Smith, Swoopes, Lobo, Thompson, Weatherspoon, Catchings, Griffith, and Jackson have played in the Women's National Basketball Association.[4][5][89][90][91][92][93] Harris-Stewart is the only female drafted by an NBA team,[94] while Meyers is the only one to have been signed by an NBA team.[95]

Two player inductees have won the John Bunn Award—Bob Cousy and Wooden.

Twenty player inductees were born outside the United States. Canadian-born Robert J. "Bob" Houbregs (inducted 1987) was drafted by NBA's Milwaukee Hawks in 1953 and played five seasons in the league.[96] Four inductees were born in the former Soviet Union: Sergei A. Belov, Šarūnas Marčiulionis, Arvydas Sabonis, and Uljana Semjonova. Belov, inducted in 1992, was born in modern-day Russia; Sabonis and Marčiulionis, respectively inducted in 2011 and 2014, were born in today's Lithuania. All three players won gold medals for the USSR at the Olympic Games. Marčiulionis and Sabonis each added two bronze medals for Lithuania after the restoration of its independence in 1990; Marčiulionis is also credited by the Hall with resurrecting the Lithuania national team after independence. Semjonova, inducted in 1993, was born in what is now Latvia. She won two Olympic golds with the USSR women's team.

Krešimir Ćosić, Dražen Petrović, Dražen Dalipagić, Dino Rađa, Vlade Divac, Toni Kukoč and Radivoj Korać (inducted in 1996, 2002, 2004, 2018, 2019, 2021 and 2022 respectively) represented Yugoslavia internationally during their careers. Petrović, Rađa and Kukoč represented Croatia after the initial breakup of Yugoslavia in 1991. Italian-born Dino Meneghin (inducted 2003) spent his entire career playing in the Italian A League.

Three Brazilians have represented their homeland internationally: Hortência de Fatima Marcari (inducted in 2005) for the women's national team, Maciel "Ubiratan" Pereira (inducted in 2010) and Oscar Schmidt (inducted in 2013) for the men's national team. Mutombo (inducted in 2015) was born in the country now known as the Democratic Republic of the Congo. Yao Ming, inducted in 2016, was born and raised in China.

American Dominique Wilkins, inducted in 2006, was born in France during his father's posting in that country as a member of the U.S. Air Force. John Isaacs (inducted in 2015) was born in Panama but raised in Harlem. Although born in New Jersey, 2017 inductee Nikos Galis played the whole of his professional career in Greece. 2018 inductee Steve Nash was born in Johannesburg, South Africa, and grew up in Canada.

Referees Edit

The Referee category has existed since the beginning of the Hall of Fame and the first referee was inducted in 1959. Since then, seventeen referees have been inducted.[3] Ernest C. Quigley, born in Canada, is the only inductee in this category born outside of the United States.

Year Inductee Achievements[a] Ref.
1959 Matthew P. "Pat" Kennedy Officiated high school, college, and professional games (1924–56); officiated in NCAA and NIT tournaments; BAA/NBA supervisor of referees (1946–50); officiated for the Harlem Globetrotters (1950–56) [97]
1960 George T. Hepbron Conducted first national rules seminar; editor of AAU Basketball Guide (1901–14); secretary of the Olympic Basketball Committee (1903) [98]
1961 George H. Hoyt Founded Eastern Massachusetts Board of Approved Basketball Officials; founded New England Interscholastic Basketball Tournament; chief of officials for the Eastern Massachusetts High School Tournament; refereed high school and college games [99]
1961 Ernest C. Quigley Supervisor of NCAA tournament officials (1940–42); member of NCAA Football Rules Committee (1946–54); officiated more than 1,500 games in 40-year career; was Major League Baseball umpire for 25 years [100]
1961 David "Dave" Tobey Officiated in the Eastern Intercollegiate Conference, the Eastern Conference, the Ivy League, and in the National Invitation Tournament; Executive Committee of the New York City High School Coaches Association; honorary member of the International Association of Approved Basketball Officials (IAABO) [101]
1962 David H. Walsh New Jersey State championship at Hoboken High School (1924); Associate Director of Collegiate Basketball Officials Bureau (1941–56); co-author of first Manual of Basketball Officiating; officiated in the Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball Conference and the Eastern Conference [102]
1978 John P. Nucatola Officiated in 18 NCAA tournaments, in 18 National Invitation Tournaments; original referee in the BAA and NBA (1946–54); officiated in the Olympics (Helsinki, 1952, Melbourne, 1956) [103]
1979 James E. "Jim" Enright Officiated in Olympic playoffs (London, 1948, Helsinki, 1952), in NCAA Final Four (1954), in NCAA regional tournaments (1952, 1953); officiated two Major League Baseball All-Star Games (1950, 1962) [104]
1980 J. Dallas Shirley Officiated in the Olympics (Rome, 1960); chief official of Pan American Games (1959); Chairman of U.S. Olympic Basketball Officials Committee (1976); conducted clinics in the U.S. and 13 foreign countries [105]
1983 Lloyd R. Leith Officiated NCAA championship game between Kentucky and Kansas State (1951); officiated in the NCAA tournament for 16 years; became the tenth referee enshrined into the Hall; supervisor of officials of the Pacific Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (1955–62) [106]
1986 Zigmund J. "Red" Mihalik Officiated 6 NCAA championship finals; refereed 3 NAIA Finals and 3 NIT Finals; officiated in the Olympics (Tokyo, 1964, Mexico City, 1968); best referee by Dell Publications [107]
1995 Earl Strom Officiated in 7 NBA All-Star Games, in 29 NBA and ABA Finals; officiated in 2,400 regular season and 295 playoff games; NBA crew chief (1967–68) [108]
2007 Marvin "Mendy" Rudolph Officiated 2,112 NBA games, a record at the time of his retirement; first referee to officiate more than 2,000 NBA games; referee of 8 NBA All-Star Games and at least 1 game of the NBA Finals for 22 consecutive seasons; NBA Head of Officials [109]
2012 Hank Nichols Officiated six NCAA men's Division I championship games, including 1975 (the final game of John Wooden) and 1979 (the start of the rivalry between Larry Bird and Magic Johnson), and 10 Final Fours; only official to work the NCAA and NIT championship games in the same year; first NCAA Coordinator of Men's Basketball Officials (1986); often called the "John Wooden of officials" [110]
2015 Richard "Dick" Bavetta Officiated in the NBA for 39 years, never missing a game in his entire career (2,635 games), including 27 NBA Finals games, over 250 playoff games, and three All-Star Games; first NBA official to call an Olympic game (1992) [111]
2016 Darell Garretson Officiated in the NBA for 27 years from 1967 to 1994, and later served as NBA Supervisor of Officials for 17 years from 1981 to 1998. Credited for creating and heading the first union for NBA referees, known as the National Association of Basketball Referees, a predecessor to the present day NBRA. [5]
2022 Hubert "Hugh" Evans Officiated in the NBA for 28 years from 1973 to 2001, including 1,969 regular season games, 35 NBA Finals games, over 170 playoff games and four All-Star Games. Served as the NBA Assistant Supervisor of Offficials [112]

Teams Edit

The Team category has existed since the beginning of the Hall of Fame and the first teams were inducted in 1959. Four teams were enshrined before 1963, but the fifth was not enshrined until 2002. All told, 12 teams have been inducted, with the most recents being the Tennessee A&I State Teams of 1957, 1958, 1959 and the Wayland Baptist Women's Teams of 1948–82 inducted in 2019.[6]

 
Buffalo Germans, inducted in 1961
 
The 1992 United States national men basketball team playing at the 1992 Summer Olympics at Barcelona. The team was inducted in 2010.
Year Inductee Achievements[a] Ref.
1959 First Team Founded during a class at the Springfield YMCA; first game of basketball played on December 21, 1891, and consisted of 18 players, 9 to a side; score of first game was 1–0; toured U.S. and helped popularize basketball in the months following its invention [113]
1959 Original Celtics First professional team to sign exclusive player contracts; 2 American Basketball League (ABL) championships (1926–27); introduced post play, zone defenses, and switching man-to-man defense [114]
1961 Buffalo Germans Pan American Championship (1901); Olympic exhibition title (St. Louis, 1904); went undefeated in 5 of first 18 seasons; won 111 straight games (1908–10) [115]
1963 New York Renaissance Pioneering all-black team, compiled record of 2588–539 in the 1920s, 30s and 40s, Founded and owned by Hall of Famer Robert L. Douglas; World Professional Tournament (1939) [116]
2002 Harlem Globetrotters Played more than 20,000 games in more than 100 countries; the 25th anniversary tour was highlighted by a game before 75,000 fans in Berlin's Olympic Stadium (1951); won John Bunn Award (1999) [117]
2007 Texas Western Won the 1966 NCAA National Championship, started 5 African-American players (Bobby Joe Hill, David Lattin, Orsten Artis, Willie Worsley, & Harry Flournoy); finished the season with a 28–1 record; coached by Hall of Famer Don Haskins [118]
2010 1960 United States Olympic Team Widely considered the greatest collegiate team ever assembled; won the gold medal at the 1960 Summer Olympics with an 8–0 record and an average victory margin of over 40 points; roster (Jay Arnette, Walt Bellamy, Bob Boozer, Terry Dischinger, Burdette Haldorson, Darrall Imhoff, Allen Kelley, Lester Lane, Jerry Lucas, Oscar Robertson, Adrian Smith, Jerry West) included four future Hall of Fame players (Bellamy, Lucas, Robertson, West) and 10 future NBA players, with four named consecutively as Rookies of the Year (Robertson, Bellamy, Dischinger, Lucas from 1961 to 1964) and three named among the 50 Greatest Players in NBA History in 1996 (Lucas, Robertson, West); coaching staff (Pete Newell, Warren Womble, Dutch Lonborg) included two future Hall of Famers (Newell and Lonborg) [119]
2010 1992 United States Olympic Team ("Dream Team") Called by the Hall of Fame "the greatest collection of basketball talent on the planet"; won the gold medal at the 1992 Summer Olympics with an 8–0 record and an average victory margin of nearly 44 points; roster (Charles Barkley, Larry Bird, Clyde Drexler, Patrick Ewing, Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, Christian Laettner, Karl Malone, Chris Mullin, Scottie Pippen, David Robinson, John Stockton) included 11 Hall of Fame players (all except Laettner) and 10 named among the NBA's 50 Greatest as well as NBA's 75 Greatest (all except Laettner and Mullin); coaching staff (Chuck Daly, Lenny Wilkens, Mike Krzyzewski, P. J. Carlesimo) included three Hall of Famers (Daly, Wilkens, Krzyzewski), FIBA Hall of Fame (2017) [120]
2012 All American Red Heads All-women's team founded in 1936 playing against men's teams under men's rules; won 96 straight games at one point; credited by the Hall with "shattering stereotypes about female athletes and overcoming social barriers that existed on and off the basketball court" [121]
2014 Immaculata College Called by the Hall "the first dynasty in women's college basketball"; won three consecutive AIAW national championships (1972–1974), including one undefeated season and a 35-game winning streak [6]
2019 Tennessee A&I State Teams of 1957, 1958, 1959 First African-American college team to win a major national championship and first college program to win three consecutive basketball national championships, led by Hall of Fame coach John McLendon (1979 & 2016) and players Dick Barnett and John "Rabbit" Barnhill.
2019 Wayland Baptist Women's Teams of 1948–82 Held a 151-game winning streak from 1953 to 1958 and 10 overall AAU National Championships. They were inducted into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2013 along with these individuals:
Harley Redin, coach 1955–73 (1999)
Katherine Washington, 1957–60 (2000)
Dean Weese, coach 1973–79 (2000)
Claude Hutcherson, sponsor 1950–77 (2003)
Patsy Neal, 1956–60 (2003)
Marsha Sharp, player 1970-72 & coach 1972–74 (2003)
Jill Rankin Schneider, 1975–78 (2011)

Notes Edit

  • a According to individuals' pages on the official website

References Edit

General
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list, members, naismith, memorial, basketball, hall, fame, this, article, needs, updated, please, help, update, this, article, reflect, recent, events, newly, available, information, april, 2023, naismith, memorial, basketball, hall, fame, located, springfield. This article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information April 2023 The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame located in Springfield Massachusetts honors players who have shown exceptional skill at basketball all time great coaches referees and other major contributors to the sport It is named after James Naismith who conceived the sport in 1891 he was inducted into the Hall as a contributor in 1959 1 To be considered for induction nominees must meet certain prerequisites Players must have been retired for at least three years before becoming eligible Referees must have either been retired for at least three years or if they are still active have officiated for at least 25 years at high school level programs or higher Coaches must have either been retired for at least three years or if they are still active have coached for at least 25 years at high school level programs or higher and from 2020 on must have coached for at least 25 years and reached the age of sixty years 2 Those being considered for induction as contributors may be inducted at any time the Hall of Fame and its committees evaluate whether contributions are significant enough for the nominee to be inducted as a contributor 3 Teams are also inducted at the committees discretion Contents 1 Members 1 1 Coaches 1 2 Contributors 1 3 Players 1 4 Referees 1 5 Teams 2 Notes 3 ReferencesMembers EditCoaches Edit Main article List of coaches in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame As part of the inaugural class of 1959 three coaches were inducted Forrest C Phog Allen Henry Clifford Carlson and Walter E Meanwell in total 100 coaches have been inducted into the Hall of Fame Ten of the inducted coaches were born outside the United States Cesare Rubini Italy 1994 Alexander Gomelsky Soviet Union now Russia 1995 Antonio Diaz Miguel Spain 1997 Aleksandar Aca Nikolic Yugoslavia now Serbia 1998 Geno Auriemma Italy 2006 Alessandro Sandro Gamba Italy 2006 Mirko Novosel Yugoslavia now Croatia 2007 Pedro Ferrandiz Spain 2007 Lidia Alexeeva Soviet Union now Russia 2012 and Lindsay Gaze Australia 2015 4 Six of them have won championships in the EuroLeague or its historic predecessor the FIBA European Champions Cup Ten of the inducted coaches are women L Margaret Wade 1985 Jody Conradt 1998 Pat Head Summitt 2000 Sandra Kay Yow 2002 Sue Gunter 2005 Cathy Rush 2008 C Vivian Stringer 2009 Tara VanDerveer 2011 Alexeeva 2012 and Sylvia Hatchell 2013 Five coaches have also been inducted as players John Wooden Bill Sharman Lenny Wilkens Tom Heinsohn and Bill Russell 4 The most recent coaches to be inducted are Tom Izzo and John McLendon the latter inducted as a contributor in 1979 is the first individual to be inducted separately as a coach and contributor 5 Most of the inductees have been college head coaches Thirty two have led a team to the National Collegiate Athletic Association NCAA men s championship and six have led a team to the NCAA women s championship Twenty inductees have coached in the National Basketball Association NBA Twelve of them have won at least one NBA championship as head coaches one other Don Nelson has five NBA championships as a player Additionally Bobby Slick Leonard won three titles in the former American Basketball Association Larry Brown is the only inductee to coach both a college basketball team and a professional basketball team to a title having coached the Kansas Jayhawks NCAA and the Detroit Pistons NBA to championships Six coaching inductees have received the Hall s John Bunn Award given annually for significant contributions to the sport Red Auerbach Henry Iba Ray Meyer Summitt Wooden and Morgan Wootten Twelve inductees have either before or after their induction won an Olympic medal coaching a men s national team to a top three finish in the Olympic tournament Eight coached the U S national team while the other four coached foreign national teams Six inductees Summitt Yow Auriemma Van Chancellor VanDerveer and Alexeeva have led a women s national team to a top three finish in the Olympics Alexeeva led the Soviet Union to two golds while all the others led the United States to gold medals Auriemma after his induction the others before being inducted Six individuals inducted as coaches were associated with teams that have been inducted to the Hall as units Donald L Don Haskins inducted in 1997 was the head coach of the 1966 Texas Western basketball team which was inducted into the Hall in 2007 Chuck Daly inducted in 1994 was the head coach of the Dream Team the USA team at the 1992 Olympics that featured 11 Hall of Fame players and was inducted as a unit in 2010 Wilkens inducted as a coach in 1998 and Mike Krzyzewski inducted in 2001 were Daly s assistants in 1992 Dutch Lonborg inducted in 1973 was team manager for the 1960 U S men s Olympic team that was also inducted as a unit in 2010 Cathy Rush inducted in 2008 was the head coach of the Immaculata College women s team of 1972 1974 that was inducted in 2014 6 Contributors Edit For a person to be inducted to the Basketball Hall of Fame as a contributor they must have made significant contributions to the game of basketball 3 Of the inaugural Hall of Fame class of 1959 seven individuals were inducted as contributors including James Naismith the inventor of basketball All former NBA commissioners Maurice Podoloff J Walter Kennedy Larry O Brien and David Stern have been inducted Seventeen individuals inducted as contributors have won the John Bunn Award awarded by the Hall annually to a significant contributor John Bunn its inaugural recipient J Walter Kennedy Cliff Fagan Edward Gottlieb Danny Biasone Larry O Brien Dave Gavitt C M Newton Tex Winter Meadowlark Lemon Tom Jernstedt Tom Satch Sanders Val Ackerman George Raveling 4 Al Attles Rod Thorn and Del Harris Four inductees in this category are women Senda Berenson Abbott and Bertha Teague both inducted in 1985 Rebecca Lobo 2017 and Val Ackerman 2021 7 The exact number of individuals enshrined as contributors as well as the number of player inductees is subject to debate because of the Hall s treatment of 2014 inductee Nathaniel Sweetwater Clifton one of the first African Americans to play in the NBA While he was initially announced as a contributor 8 the Hall now classifies him as a player inductee 9 Six inductees in this category were associated with teams that have been inducted to the Hall as units Naismith organized The First Team the group of players involved in the first ever basketball game in 1891 and also inducted as part of the inaugural Class of 1959 Robert L Douglas inducted in 1972 was the founder and owner of the New York Renaissance inducted in 1963 Pete Newell inducted in 1979 was the head coach of the 1960 U S Olympic team inducted in 2010 Three were associated with the Harlem Globetrotters inducted in 2002 Abe Saperstein inducted in 1971 was the team s founder and owner Kennedy although best known for his time as NBA commissioner had been the Globetrotters public relations director in the 1950s Lemon inducted in 2003 was one of the team s most enduring on court stars Ten individuals inducted in this category were born outside the United States Naismith and Newell in Canada Podoloff and Gottlieb in modern day Ukraine part of the Russian Empire when they were born in 1890 and 1898 respectively Douglas in Saint Kitts and Nevis part of the British West Indies at his birth in 1882 Saperstein in the United Kingdom Biasone and Renato William Jones in Italy Ferenc Hepp in modern day Hungary Austria Hungary at his birth in 1909 and Borislav Stankovic in what is now Bosnia and Herzegovina the Kingdom of Yugoslavia at his birth in 1925 In total 81 individuals have been inducted as contributors Luther Gulick inducted in 1959 Amos Alonzo Stagg inducted in 1959Year Inductee Achievements Ref 1959 Luther H Gulick Head of Physical Education at School for Christian Workers 1887 1900 Chairman of Amateur Athletic Union AAU Basketball Committee 1895 1905 10 1959 Edward J Ed Hickox Represented New England in Olympic Trials Springfield College 1936 five New England championships Springfield College Board of Directors of Basketball Hall of Fame 1959 66 National Association of Basketball Coaches NABC historian 1944 66 11 1959 Ralph Morgan Founded Collegiate Basketball Rules Committee 1905 Secretary and Treasurer of Rules Committee 1905 31 Founded Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball League now the Ivy League 1910 Secretary and Treasurer of Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball League 1910 31 12 1959 James Naismith Physical education instructor Springfield College 1890 95 invented the game of basket ball now called basketball developed basketball s original 13 rules physical education professor Kansas 1917 37 FIBA Hall of Fame 2007 13 1959 Harold G Olsen Big Ten Championships Ohio State 1925 1933 1939 1944 1946 helped found NCAA tournament 1939 Chairman of NCAA Rules Committee first Coach of Basketball Association of America s BAA Chicago Stags 1946 49 14 1959 Amos Alonzo Stagg Played in the first public basketball game at Springfield and scored the team s only basket in a 5 1 loss 7 Big Ten titles during late 19th century and early 20th century Chicago 15 1959 Oswald Tower Member of Basketball Rules Committee 1910 60 Editor of Official Basketball Guide 1915 60 official rules interpreter 1915 60 coach of Wilbraham MA Academy 1907 10 16 1960 Henry V Porter First representative for high schools on the National Basketball Rules Committee pioneered use of motion pictures to study proper playing techniques edited the first high school rule book 1936 edited the first state high school association publication the Illinois High School Athlete 17 1961 John J O Brien President Metropolitan Basketball League 1922 28 1931 33 President and chairman of the board American Basketball League 1928 31 1933 53 dedicated to the advancement of professional basketball in the East supporter of referees and one of the first league administrators to begin fining players 18 1961 Arthur A Schabinger Officiated in the Missouri Valley Conference Big Eight Kansas and Missouri Conferences and the national AAU championships one of the founders of the NABC author of the NABC s Constitution and By Laws and designer of its emblem promoted the adoption of molded basketball by colleges 19 1961 Arthur L Trester Commissioner of Indiana High School Athletic Association 1922 44 coach and referee in Indiana known as the Czar of Indiana high school athletics 20 1962 Frank Morgenweck Operated and coached professional teams in 14 cities in the National New England Western Massachusetts Hudson River Central New York State Inter State Metropolitan Eastern States and American leagues 1901 32 National League championship Camden 1904 Metropolitan League championships Patterson 1923 Kingston 1928 21 1962 Lynn W St John Lobbied for formal national and international rules for amateur basketball for three decades served on NCAA Rules Committee with James Naismith 1912 37 Chairman Rules Committee 1919 37 Member Olympic Basketball Committee 1936 22 1963 William A Reid Director of athletics University of Detroit 1919 Director of athletics Colgate University 1936 55 President Eastern Collegiate Athletic Conference ECAC 1944 45 Director ECAC Executive Council 1945 49 23 1964 John W Bunn Coached Stanford to Pacific Coast Conference championships 1936 38 Helms Athletic Foundation Championship Stanford 1937 Chairman Basketball Hall of Fame 1949 63 Editor College Guide and Official Rules Interpreter 1959 60 John Bunn Award 1973 24 1964 Edward S Ned Irish Basketball director Madison Square Garden 1934 integral in formation of BAA 1946 founded the New York Knicks 1946 President New York Knicks 1946 74 25 1964 R William Jones Co founded the International Amateur Basketball Federation FIBA 1932 organized men s and women s European Championships 1935 63 organized men s and women s World Championships 1950 63 organized Olympic Basketball Tournament 1936 60 FIBA Hall of Fame 2007 26 1965 Walter A Brown President of the Boston Garden 1937 64 founded the Boston Celtics 1946 Celtics owner 1946 64 spearheaded the formation of the NBA 1949 President of the International Ice Hockey Federation 27 1965 Paul D Tony Hinkle Helms Athletic Foundation Championship Butler 1924 1929 President NABC 1954 55 Chairman Rules Committee of the National Basketball Committee of U S and Canada coached the Great Lakes Navy teams during World War II 28 1965 William G Bill Mokray Started concept of college basketball doubleheaders at the Boston Garden 1944 45 first Chairman of the Hall of Fame Honors Committee 1959 64 owned the world s largest basketball library considered the number one authority on the game s history 29 1968 Clair F Bee Influential in the development of 3 second rule developed the 1 3 1 zone defense National Invitation Tournament NIT championship Long Island University 1939 1941 Author Chip Hilton s Sports Stories for Young People Coach of the Baltimore Bullets 1952 54 30 1969 Charles H Chuck Taylor Shoe salesman Organized first basketball clinic at North Carolina State University 1922 developed the popular Converse Basketball Yearbook 1922 selected All America teams 1932 The Chuck Taylor All Star was the official shoe of the Olympics 1936 68 31 1971 Abraham M Abe Saperstein Owner of the Harlem Globetrotters Saperstein s Globetrotters played before 55 million fans in 87 countries the Globetrotters were part of the first basketball sellout ever at Madison Square Garden led the Globetrotters to the World Professional Title 1940 won the International Cup with the Globetrotters 1943 44 32 1972 Robert L Bob Douglas Owned and coached New York Renaissance 1922 49 World Professional Championship with Renaissance 1939 known as The Father of Black Professional Basketball 33 1972 Edward Ed Gottlieb BAA Championship Philadelphia Warriors 1947 NBA Championship Philadelphia Warriors 1956 Coach and Owner of Warriors 1946 55 and 1946 62 Chairman of NBA Rules Committee for 25 years served as NBA schedule maker for 30 years John Bunn Award 1979 34 1972 W R Clifford Cliff Wells 50 district regional and invitational tournaments including two championships Indiana state 1919 1934 first President Indiana High School Coaching Association member of National Rules Committee 1952 56 first full time executive secretary and director of Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame 1963 66 35 1973 Elmer H Ripley 2 NCAA Tournament Georgetown 1941 1943 Eastern Championship Georgetown 1943 Israeli Olympic team coach Melbourne 1956 Canadian Olympic team coach Rome 1960 36 1974 Harry A Fisher 2 Helms Athletic Foundation Championship Columbia 1904 05 Helms Athletic Foundation All America Columbia 1904 05 Eastern Intercollegiate League championship Columbia 1911 12 1914 editor of Collegiate Guide 1905 15 37 1974 Maurice Podoloff Served as NBA s first commissioner 1949 63 negotiated NBA s first TV contract 1954 arranged for construction and use of the first 24 second clock 1954 NBA s MVP Award is named in his honor 38 1975 Emil S Liston 2 Kansas Conference Championship Baker University 1930 1937 President of Kansas Conference Coaches Association 1936 38 created National Association of Intercollegiate Basketball NAIB National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics NAIA tournament 1937 served as NAIA executive secretary 1940 49 39 1979 John B McLendon 3 NAIA championship Tennessee State 1957 59 NAIA Coach of the Year 1958 8 CIAA championships 1941 1943 44 1946 47 1949 50 1952 first African American coach with Cleveland Pipers of the American Basketball League later coach of the Denver Rockets ABA 40 1979 Peter F Pete Newell NCAA Championship California 1959 NIT Championship San Francisco 1949 Olympic Gold Medal Rome 1960 with the 1960 United States Olympic Team inducted as a unit in 2010 National Coach of the Year 1960 FIBA Hall of Fame 2009 41 1980 Lester Les Harrison Organized Rochester Seagrams Ebers and Pros 1920s 40s Owner of Rochester Royals 1945 1958 NBA championship Rochester Royals 1951 instrumental in formation of NBA 1949 organized Kodak Classic Collegiate Tournament now Rochester Basketball Classic 42 1981 Ferenc Hepp Member of FIBA Technical Commission 1948 56 President of Hungarian Basketball Federation 1954 member of FIBA Central Board 1956 member of FIBA Commission of Finances and Amateurism 1960 80 FIBA Hall of Fame 2007 43 1981 James Walter Kennedy Public Relations Director BAA NBA 1946 51 Public Relations Director Harlem Globetrotters 1950s NBA Commissioner 1963 75 John Bunn Award 1975 NBA named their citizenship award in his honor 44 1982 Alva O Duer NAIB Finals appearance Pepperdine 1945 Director and founder of NAIB NAIA National Basketball Championship Tournament 1949 75 member of U S Basketball Association Ethics Committee 1960 64 Board of Directors U S Olympic Committee 45 1983 Louis G Wilke Chairman AAU Basketball Committee seven terms Chairman and team manager Olympic Basketball Committee 1948 Executive board member U S Olympic Committee 1956 1960 Vice chairman Pan American Federation and FIBA Rules Committee 1962 46 1984 Clifford B Cliff Fagan Executive Secretary of Wisconsin Interscholastic Athletic Association 1947 57 Secretary of National Basketball Rules Committee 1958 77 executive director of the National Federation of State High School Athletic Associations 1958 77 member of U S Olympic Committee Board of Directors 1961 76 John Bunn Award 1977 47 1984 Edward S Ed Steitz Instrumental in the reinstatement of the dunk 1976 eliminated jump ball with the exception of the start of the game and overtime 1981 advocate of the 45 second shot clock and three point shot 1985 NIT Selection Committee 1962 68 FIBA Hall of Fame 2007 48 1985 Senda Berenson Abbott Director of Physical Education Smith College 1892 11 organized first women s game at Smith College March 22 1893 author Basketball Guide for Women 1901 07 Chairperson Basketball Committee for Women 1905 17 49 1985 Bertha F Teague 8 Oklahoma state championships and 7 runners up compiled 36 20 plus win seasons including 28 consecutive 1930 57 founded the first girls basketball clinic and camp in the Southwest coach of the Decade 1930s 1940s 1960s by Jim Thorpe Athletic Awards Committee 1974 50 1991 Lawrence Larry Fleisher NBA Players Association general counsel 1963 87 developed free agent system 1976 established antidrug agreement involved in ABA NBA merger 51 1991 Lawrence F Larry O Brien NBA Commissioner 1975 84 The Sporting News Sportsman of the Year 1976 created NBA college scholarship program 1980 developed antidrug program 1984 President Basketball Hall of Fame 1985 87 John Bunn Award 1984 52 1991 Borislav Boris Stankovic Italian national championship Oransoda team 1968 oversaw the introduction of the three point line in international competition overseen reorganization of FIBA into zonal administration system member of International Olympic Committee FIBA Hall of Fame 2007 53 1999 Wayne R Embry Five time NBA All Star 1961 65 NBA championship Boston Celtics 1968 first African American NBA general manager Milwaukee Bucks 1971 79 later GM of the Cleveland Cavaliers The Sporting News NBA Executive of the Year 1992 1998 54 1999 Fred Zollner Owner of the Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons Detroit Pistons 1941 1974 NBL championship Fort Wayne Zollner Pistons 1944 45 key figure in the merger of the BAA and NBL to form the NBA NBA Finals appearance Fort Wayne Pistons 1955 56 named Mr Pro Basketball at the 1975 Silver Anniversary All Star Game 55 2000 Daniel Danny Biasone President and founder Syracuse Nationals 1946 63 inventor of 24 second shot clock 1954 NBA championship Syracuse Nationals 1955 John Bunn Award 1982 56 2000 Charles Martin Newton NCAA Championship Kentucky 1951 Southeastern Conference SEC Coach of the Year 1972 and 1976 with Alabama 1988 and 1989 with Vanderbilt President USA Basketball 1992 96 John Bunn Award 1997 57 2003 Francis D Chick Hearn Los Angeles Lakers broadcaster Three time National Sportscaster of the Year 1959 1965 1987 Curt Gowdy Media Award 1992 Emmy Award for Excellence in Basketball Coverage 1965 Star on Hollywood Walk of Fame 1986 58 2003 Meadowlark Lemon Longtime player for the Harlem Globetrotters John Bunn Award 1998 played in more than 16 000 games known as the Clown Prince of Basketball 59 2003 Earl F Lloyd CIAA Player of the Decade for the 1940s NAIA Silver and Golden Anniversary Teams first African American to play in an NBA game 1950 60 NBA Championship Team 1955 first African American bench coach 1968 61 2004 Jerry Colangelo Owner and GM of the Phoenix Suns The Sporting News NBA Executive of the Year 1976 1981 1989 1993 youngest general manager in professional sports 1968 enshrined in Illinois Basketball Hall of Fame 1995 former Chairman and CEO of the Arizona Diamondbacks GM of the U S Men s National Basketball team 2005 present 62 2005 Hubert Hubie Brown Coach of the Atlanta Hawks New York Knicks and Memphis Grizzlies Two time NBA Coach of the Year 1978 2004 ABA Championship Kentucky Colonels 1975 Curt Gowdy Media Award 2000 nominated for a Sports Emmy 1994 1999 63 2006 Dave Gavitt Coach 1980 United States Olympic Team five time New England Coach of the Year founder of the Big East Conference John Bunn Lifetime Achievement Award 1987 Naismith Outstanding Contribution to Basketball Award winner 1993 64 2008 William Davidson Principal owner Detroit Pistons 1974 2009 NBA championships Detroit Pistons 1989 90 2004 Women s National Basketball Association WNBA championships Detroit Shock 2003 2006 2008 first owner in North American sports history to win championships in three different major professional leagues NBA WNBA and National Hockey League NHL 65 2008 Richard Dick Vitale ESPN Broadcaster Sports Personality of the Year by the American Sportscasters Association 1989 Curt Gowdy Media Award 1998 NABC Cliff Wells Appreciation Award 2000 Books include Time Out Baby Campus Chaos Living a Dream and Holding Court 66 2010 Jerry Buss Owner of the Los Angeles Lakers 1979 2013 and Los Angeles Sparks 1997 2006 10 NBA championships Lakers 1980 1982 1985 1987 88 2000 02 2009 10 2 WNBA championships Sparks 2001 02 67 2011 Tom Satch Sanders Player with the Boston Celtics 1960 73 8 NBA championships 1961 66 1968 1969 later coach of the Celtics and Harvard University key developer of the NBA s Rookie Transition Program and founder of many of the league s player programs John Bunn Award 2007 68 2011 Tex Winter Architect of the triangle offense two NCAA Final Fours at Kansas State University 1958 1964 UPI National Coach of the Year 1958 NABC president 1982 83 nine NBA titles as an assistant Chicago Bulls 1991 1993 1996 1998 Los Angeles Lakers 2000 2002 John Bunn Award 1998 69 2012 Donald Don Barksdale First African American to be named to a major college All America team Helms Foundation 1947 with UCLA first African American to play for and win Olympic gold with Team USA 1948 first African American to play in the NBA All Star Game 1953 70 2012 Phil Knight Co founder of Nike credited with expanding the game of basketball around the world through its innovative products and influential marketing and the first sports brand to incorporate top athletes to connect with consumers emotionally 71 2013 Russ Granik NBA executive from 1976 to 2006 involved in every major negotiation including television contracts collective bargaining and league expansion during his tenure also president of USA Basketball who helped oversee the inclusion of NBA players in the 1992 Olympic Dream Team 72 2013 Edwin Bancroft Henderson Dubbed the Father of Black Basketball introduced the sport to the black community in Washington D C in the early 20th century and formed many organizations to govern and promote the sport among African Americans 73 2014 Nathaniel Sweetwater Clifton First African American player to sign an NBA contract who caught on with a team one time NBA All Star 1957 also played with two Hall of Fame teams in the New York Renaissance and Harlem Globetrotters 1978 inductee in the Black Athletes Hall of Fame 74 2014 David Stern NBA commissioner from 1984 to 2014 during which time the league expanded by seven teams and signed several lucrative TV deals Also responsible for the creation of the WNBA the draft lottery and several league outreach organizations FIBA Hall of Fame 2016 75 2015 George Raveling Longtime college coach and broadcaster who served on the boards of many major basketball organizations among them the NABC NCAA USA Basketball and Nike also serving as Nike s director of grassroots and international basketball John Bunn Award 2013 76 2016 Jerry Reinsdorf Owner and chairman of the Chicago Bulls since 1985 turning the franchise into a lucrative business that won six NBA Championships in the 1990s 1991 1993 and 1996 1998 77 2017 Rebecca Lobo She was a member of the NCAA National Champion Connecticut Huskies 1995 She won several awards including AP Female Athlete of the Year the Wade Trophy the Naismith Award WBCA National Player of the Year and USBWA National Player of the Year 78 2017 Mannie Jackson A Harlem Globetrotters star He saved the team from extinction by buying it and becoming its CEO from 1993 to 2007 Mannie Jackson is the First African American to own a major International sports and entertainment organization He was also the Chairman of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame 2007 2009 79 2017 Tom Jernstedt An NCAA administrator with a career of 38 years He formerly played for Oregon Ducks as a quarterback He helped in increasing the revenue of NCAA Basketball television contract from 1 2 billion when he arrived to 10 8 billion when he left in 2010 John Bunn Award 2001 80 2017 Jerry Krause Was Executive Vice President amp general manager of the Chicago Bulls during their Michael Jordan led dynasty years Won 6 NBA championships as Bulls GM 1991 1992 1993 1996 1997 1998 and also won the NBA Executive of the Year Award twice 1988 amp 1996 81 2018 Rod Thorn Player coach general manager and league executive 2002 NBA Executive of the Year John Bunn Award 2015 82 2018 Rick Welts President and Chief Executive Officer of the Phoenix Suns 2002 2011 and the Golden State Warriors 2011 2021 Won 3 NBA championships as Warriors President 2015 2017 2018 in a 5 year span 2015 2019 2019 Al Attles 1975 NBA champion as a coach for the Warriors No 16 retired by the Golden State Warriors No 22 retired by North Carolina A amp T John Bunn Award 2014 2020 Patrick Baumann Secretary General of the FIBA 2003 2018 Primarily focused on the youth sector and the expansion of 3x3 basketball as a global game while developing programs and events to grow basketball worldwide 2021 Val Ackerman Widely regarded as a trailblazing basketball executive and significant contributor to women s and men s basketball on the collegiate professional and international level Served as WNBA President from the league s inception in 1996 to 2005 and USA Basketball s first female President from 2005 to 2008 Since 2013 led the BIG EAST Conference as Commissioner launching several initiatives including BIG EAST Serves the Digital Network the Student Athlete Well Being Forum and winning two NCAA basketball national championships Villanova 2016 2018 A recipient of the John Bunn Lifetime Achievement Award 2008 the Edward Steitz Award 2013 and the Women s Sports Foundation Billie Jean King Award 2016 as well as an enshrinee of the Women s Basketball Hall of Fame 2011 83 2021 Lowell Cotton Fitzsimmons College and NBA coach Won two national championships 1966 1967 with Moberly Junior College Coach of the Buffalo Braves Kansas City Kings Atlanta Hawks San Antonio Spurs and Phoenix Suns winning 832 games Two time NBA Coach of the Year 1979 1989 84 2021 Howard Garfinkel Co founder and longtime director of Five Star Basketball Camp which revolutionized scouting recruiting and coaching development Five Star s drill station style became the standard for basketball camps and countless participants went on to play in the NBA Prior to Five Star he started High School Basketball Illustrated in 1965 the first high school scouting report He was inducted into the Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame in 2013 2022 Lawrence Larry Costello Player and coach Played for the Philadelphia Warriors Syracuse Nationals Philadelphia 76ers and Wilkes Barre Barons 1954 1968 Coached the Milwaukee Bucks Chicago Bulls Milwaukee Does and Utica College 1968 1987 NBA champion as a player with the 76ers in 1967 NBA champion as a coach with the Bucks in 1971 Six time NBA All Star 85 2022 Delmer Del Harris Coach or assistant coach at the collegiate professional and international levels from 1965 2012 including six NBA teams Named 1995 Coach of the Year with the Los Angeles Lakers John Bunn Award 2019 86 Players Edit Main article List of players in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame As part of the inaugural class of 1959 four players were inducted including George Mikan who was the first NBA player to be enshrined In total 177 or 178 players depending on Nathaniel Clifton s classification have been inducted into the Hall of Fame Of these 110 or 111 again depending on Clifton s classification have played in the NBA 5 The 1993 class had the most player inductees with eight No players were inducted in 1965 1967 1968 and 2007 Five players have also been inducted as coaches John Wooden in 1973 Lenny Wilkens in 1998 Bill Sharman in 2004 Tom Heinsohn in 2015 and Bill Russell in 2021 87 Twenty seven player inductees are women Lusia Harris Stewart 1992 Nera D White 1992 Ann E Meyers 1993 Uljana Semjonova 1993 Carol A Blazejowski 1994 Anne T Donovan 1994 Cheryl Miller 1995 Nancy I Lieberman 1996 Joan Crawford 1997 Denise M Curry 1997 Lynette Woodard 2004 Hortencia de Fatima Marcari 2005 Cynthia Cooper Dyke 2010 Teresa Edwards 2011 Katrina McClain Johnson 2012 Dawn Staley 2013 Lisa Leslie 2015 Sheryl Swoopes 2016 5 Rebecca Lobo 2017 Katie Smith 2018 Tina Thompson 2018 88 Teresa Weatherspoon 2019 Tamika Catchings 2020 Yolanda Griffith 2021 Lauren Jackson 2021 Pearl Moore 2021 and Theresa Grentz 2022 Among these Lieberman Woodard Cooper Dyke Edwards Staley Leslie Smith Swoopes Lobo Thompson Weatherspoon Catchings Griffith and Jackson have played in the Women s National Basketball Association 4 5 89 90 91 92 93 Harris Stewart is the only female drafted by an NBA team 94 while Meyers is the only one to have been signed by an NBA team 95 Two player inductees have won the John Bunn Award Bob Cousy and Wooden Twenty player inductees were born outside the United States Canadian born Robert J Bob Houbregs inducted 1987 was drafted by NBA s Milwaukee Hawks in 1953 and played five seasons in the league 96 Four inductees were born in the former Soviet Union Sergei A Belov Sarunas Marciulionis Arvydas Sabonis and Uljana Semjonova Belov inducted in 1992 was born in modern day Russia Sabonis and Marciulionis respectively inducted in 2011 and 2014 were born in today s Lithuania All three players won gold medals for the USSR at the Olympic Games Marciulionis and Sabonis each added two bronze medals for Lithuania after the restoration of its independence in 1990 Marciulionis is also credited by the Hall with resurrecting the Lithuania national team after independence Semjonova inducted in 1993 was born in what is now Latvia She won two Olympic golds with the USSR women s team Kresimir Cosic Drazen Petrovic Drazen Dalipagic Dino Rađa Vlade Divac Toni Kukoc and Radivoj Korac inducted in 1996 2002 2004 2018 2019 2021 and 2022 respectively represented Yugoslavia internationally during their careers Petrovic Rađa and Kukoc represented Croatia after the initial breakup of Yugoslavia in 1991 Italian born Dino Meneghin inducted 2003 spent his entire career playing in the Italian A League Three Brazilians have represented their homeland internationally Hortencia de Fatima Marcari inducted in 2005 for the women s national team Maciel Ubiratan Pereira inducted in 2010 and Oscar Schmidt inducted in 2013 for the men s national team Mutombo inducted in 2015 was born in the country now known as the Democratic Republic of the Congo Yao Ming inducted in 2016 was born and raised in China American Dominique Wilkins inducted in 2006 was born in France during his father s posting in that country as a member of the U S Air Force John Isaacs inducted in 2015 was born in Panama but raised in Harlem Although born in New Jersey 2017 inductee Nikos Galis played the whole of his professional career in Greece 2018 inductee Steve Nash was born in Johannesburg South Africa and grew up in Canada Referees Edit The Referee category has existed since the beginning of the Hall of Fame and the first referee was inducted in 1959 Since then seventeen referees have been inducted 3 Ernest C Quigley born in Canada is the only inductee in this category born outside of the United States Year Inductee Achievements a Ref 1959 Matthew P Pat Kennedy Officiated high school college and professional games 1924 56 officiated in NCAA and NIT tournaments BAA NBA supervisor of referees 1946 50 officiated for the Harlem Globetrotters 1950 56 97 1960 George T Hepbron Conducted first national rules seminar editor of AAU Basketball Guide 1901 14 secretary of the Olympic Basketball Committee 1903 98 1961 George H Hoyt Founded Eastern Massachusetts Board of Approved Basketball Officials founded New England Interscholastic Basketball Tournament chief of officials for the Eastern Massachusetts High School Tournament refereed high school and college games 99 1961 Ernest C Quigley Supervisor of NCAA tournament officials 1940 42 member of NCAA Football Rules Committee 1946 54 officiated more than 1 500 games in 40 year career was Major League Baseball umpire for 25 years 100 1961 David Dave Tobey Officiated in the Eastern Intercollegiate Conference the Eastern Conference the Ivy League and in the National Invitation Tournament Executive Committee of the New York City High School Coaches Association honorary member of the International Association of Approved Basketball Officials IAABO 101 1962 David H Walsh New Jersey State championship at Hoboken High School 1924 Associate Director of Collegiate Basketball Officials Bureau 1941 56 co author of first Manual of Basketball Officiating officiated in the Eastern Intercollegiate Basketball Conference and the Eastern Conference 102 1978 John P Nucatola Officiated in 18 NCAA tournaments in 18 National Invitation Tournaments original referee in the BAA and NBA 1946 54 officiated in the Olympics Helsinki 1952 Melbourne 1956 103 1979 James E Jim Enright Officiated in Olympic playoffs London 1948 Helsinki 1952 in NCAA Final Four 1954 in NCAA regional tournaments 1952 1953 officiated two Major League Baseball All Star Games 1950 1962 104 1980 J Dallas Shirley Officiated in the Olympics Rome 1960 chief official of Pan American Games 1959 Chairman of U S Olympic Basketball Officials Committee 1976 conducted clinics in the U S and 13 foreign countries 105 1983 Lloyd R Leith Officiated NCAA championship game between Kentucky and Kansas State 1951 officiated in the NCAA tournament for 16 years became the tenth referee enshrined into the Hall supervisor of officials of the Pacific Intercollegiate Athletic Conference 1955 62 106 1986 Zigmund J Red Mihalik Officiated 6 NCAA championship finals refereed 3 NAIA Finals and 3 NIT Finals officiated in the Olympics Tokyo 1964 Mexico City 1968 best referee by Dell Publications 107 1995 Earl Strom Officiated in 7 NBA All Star Games in 29 NBA and ABA Finals officiated in 2 400 regular season and 295 playoff games NBA crew chief 1967 68 108 2007 Marvin Mendy Rudolph Officiated 2 112 NBA games a record at the time of his retirement first referee to officiate more than 2 000 NBA games referee of 8 NBA All Star Games and at least 1 game of the NBA Finals for 22 consecutive seasons NBA Head of Officials 109 2012 Hank Nichols Officiated six NCAA men s Division I championship games including 1975 the final game of John Wooden and 1979 the start of the rivalry between Larry Bird and Magic Johnson and 10 Final Fours only official to work the NCAA and NIT championship games in the same year first NCAA Coordinator of Men s Basketball Officials 1986 often called the John Wooden of officials 110 2015 Richard Dick Bavetta Officiated in the NBA for 39 years never missing a game in his entire career 2 635 games including 27 NBA Finals games over 250 playoff games and three All Star Games first NBA official to call an Olympic game 1992 111 2016 Darell Garretson Officiated in the NBA for 27 years from 1967 to 1994 and later served as NBA Supervisor of Officials for 17 years from 1981 to 1998 Credited for creating and heading the first union for NBA referees known as the National Association of Basketball Referees a predecessor to the present day NBRA 5 2022 Hubert Hugh Evans Officiated in the NBA for 28 years from 1973 to 2001 including 1 969 regular season games 35 NBA Finals games over 170 playoff games and four All Star Games Served as the NBA Assistant Supervisor of Offficials 112 Teams Edit The Team category has existed since the beginning of the Hall of Fame and the first teams were inducted in 1959 Four teams were enshrined before 1963 but the fifth was not enshrined until 2002 All told 12 teams have been inducted with the most recents being the Tennessee A amp I State Teams of 1957 1958 1959 and the Wayland Baptist Women s Teams of 1948 82 inducted in 2019 6 Buffalo Germans inducted in 1961 The 1992 United States national men basketball team playing at the 1992 Summer Olympics at Barcelona The team was inducted in 2010 Year Inductee Achievements a Ref 1959 First Team Founded during a class at the Springfield YMCA first game of basketball played on December 21 1891 and consisted of 18 players 9 to a side score of first game was 1 0 toured U S and helped popularize basketball in the months following its invention 113 1959 Original Celtics First professional team to sign exclusive player contracts 2 American Basketball League ABL championships 1926 27 introduced post play zone defenses and switching man to man defense 114 1961 Buffalo Germans Pan American Championship 1901 Olympic exhibition title St Louis 1904 went undefeated in 5 of first 18 seasons won 111 straight games 1908 10 115 1963 New York Renaissance Pioneering all black team compiled record of 2588 539 in the 1920s 30s and 40s Founded and owned by Hall of Famer Robert L Douglas World Professional Tournament 1939 116 2002 Harlem Globetrotters Played more than 20 000 games in more than 100 countries the 25th anniversary tour was highlighted by a game before 75 000 fans in Berlin s Olympic Stadium 1951 won John Bunn Award 1999 117 2007 Texas Western Won the 1966 NCAA National Championship started 5 African American players Bobby Joe Hill David Lattin Orsten Artis Willie Worsley amp Harry Flournoy finished the season with a 28 1 record coached by Hall of Famer Don Haskins 118 2010 1960 United States Olympic Team Widely considered the greatest collegiate team ever assembled won the gold medal at the 1960 Summer Olympics with an 8 0 record and an average victory margin of over 40 points roster Jay Arnette Walt Bellamy Bob Boozer Terry Dischinger Burdette Haldorson Darrall Imhoff Allen Kelley Lester Lane Jerry Lucas Oscar Robertson Adrian Smith Jerry West included four future Hall of Fame players Bellamy Lucas Robertson West and 10 future NBA players with four named consecutively as Rookies of the Year Robertson Bellamy Dischinger Lucas from 1961 to 1964 and three named among the 50 Greatest Players in NBA History in 1996 Lucas Robertson West coaching staff Pete Newell Warren Womble Dutch Lonborg included two future Hall of Famers Newell and Lonborg 119 2010 1992 United States Olympic Team Dream Team Called by the Hall of Fame the greatest collection of basketball talent on the planet won the gold medal at the 1992 Summer Olympics with an 8 0 record and an average victory margin of nearly 44 points roster Charles Barkley Larry Bird Clyde Drexler Patrick Ewing Magic Johnson Michael Jordan Christian Laettner Karl Malone Chris Mullin Scottie Pippen David Robinson John Stockton included 11 Hall of Fame players all except Laettner and 10 named among the NBA s 50 Greatest as well as NBA s 75 Greatest all except Laettner and Mullin coaching staff Chuck Daly Lenny Wilkens Mike Krzyzewski P J Carlesimo included three Hall of Famers Daly Wilkens Krzyzewski FIBA Hall of Fame 2017 120 2012 All American Red Heads All women s team founded in 1936 playing against men s teams under men s rules won 96 straight games at one point credited by the Hall with shattering stereotypes about female athletes and overcoming social barriers that existed on and off the basketball court 121 2014 Immaculata College Called by the Hall the first dynasty in women s college basketball won three consecutive AIAW national championships 1972 1974 including one undefeated season and a 35 game winning streak 6 2019 Tennessee A amp I State Teams of 1957 1958 1959 First African American college team to win a major national championship and first college program to win three consecutive basketball national championships led by Hall of Fame coach John McLendon 1979 amp 2016 and players Dick Barnett and John Rabbit Barnhill 2019 Wayland Baptist Women s Teams of 1948 82 Held a 151 game winning streak from 1953 to 1958 and 10 overall AAU National Championships They were inducted into the Women s Basketball Hall of Fame in 2013 along with these individuals Harley Redin coach 1955 73 1999 Katherine Washington 1957 60 2000 Dean Weese coach 1973 79 2000 Claude Hutcherson sponsor 1950 77 2003 Patsy Neal 1956 60 2003 Marsha Sharp player 1970 72 amp coach 1972 74 2003 Jill Rankin Schneider 1975 78 2011 Notes Edita According to individuals pages on the official websiteReferences EditGeneral Hall of Famers Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Retrieved February 14 2015 Basketball Hall of Fame Inductees basketball reference com Retrieved February 14 2015 Specific James Naismith Biography Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 7 2009 Retrieved March 28 2009 N N Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Announces Modifications to its Enshrinement Process Beginning with the Class of 2018 Hoophall Website Springfield MA Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Retrieved January 17 2018 a b c Guidelines For Nomination and Election Into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on September 4 2009 Retrieved April 11 2009 a b c d Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2015 presented by Haggar Clothing Company Press release Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame April 6 2015 Archived from the original on April 12 2015 Retrieved April 6 2015 a b c d e Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2016 Announcement presented by Haggar Clothing Company Press release Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame April 4 2016 Archived from the original on April 7 2016 Retrieved April 4 2016 a b c Immaculata College Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 10 2014 Retrieved September 11 2015 Doyle Paul September 6 2017 Lobo Heads Into Hall Of Fame Called Icon Of Women s Basketball Hartford Courant Retrieved August 21 2020 Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Announces Class of 2014 Press release Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame April 7 2014 Archived from the original on April 8 2014 Retrieved April 7 2014 Hall of Famers Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Retrieved September 11 2015 Luther H Gulick Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Edward J Ed Hickox Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Ralph Morgan Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 James Naismith Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 7 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Harold G Olsen Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Amos Alonzo Stagg Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Oswald Tower Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Henry V Porter Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 John J O Brien Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Arthur A Schabinger Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Arthur L Trester Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Frank Morgenweck Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Lynn W St John Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 William A Reid Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 John W Bunn Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Edward S Ned Irish Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 R William Jones Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Walter A Brown Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Paul D Tony Hinkle Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 William G Bill Mokray Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Clair F Bee Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Charles H Chuck Taylor Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Abraham M Abe Saperstein Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Robert L Bob Douglas Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Edward Ed Gottlieb Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 W R Clifford Cliff Wells Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Elmer H Ripley Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Harry A Fisher Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Maurice Podoloff Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Emil S Liston Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 John B McLendon Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Peter F Pete Newell Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 14 2010 Lester Les Harrison Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Ferenc Hepp Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 James Walter Kennedy Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Alva O Duer Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Louis G Wilke Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Clifford B Cliff Fagan Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Edward S Ed Steitz Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Senda Berenson Abbott Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Bertha F Teague Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Lawrence Larry Fleisher Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Lawrence F Larry O Brien Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Borislav Boris Stankovic Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on February 15 2011 Retrieved August 15 2009 Wayne R Embry Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Fred Zollner Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Daniel Danny Biasone Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Charles Martin Newton Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Francis D Chic Hearn Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Meadowlark Lemon Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on July 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Lloyd was one of three African Americans who were on NBA rosters at the start of the 1950 51 season a fourth would make his debut later that season The others who started that season were Chuck Cooper the first of the three to be drafted and Nat Clifton the first of the three to sign an NBA contract Lloyd was the first to play in a game because his team was the first to open its season Earl F Lloyd Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 14 2010 Jerry Colangelo Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Hubert Hubie Brown Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Dave Gavitt Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 William Davidson Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Dick Vitale Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 7 2009 Retrieved August 15 2009 Jerry Buss Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on February 15 2011 Retrieved August 14 2010 Tom Satch Sanders Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on February 14 2012 Retrieved August 15 2011 Tex Winter Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on January 11 2012 Retrieved September 10 2012 Donald Barksdale Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on September 7 2012 Retrieved September 7 2012 Phil Knight Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on September 11 2012 Retrieved September 7 2012 Russ Granik Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on September 11 2013 Retrieved September 9 2013 Edwin Bancroft Henderson Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on January 13 2014 Retrieved September 9 2013 Nathaniel Sweetwater Clifton Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 9 2014 Retrieved August 9 2014 David Stern Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 9 2014 Retrieved August 9 2014 George Raveling Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on December 18 2015 Retrieved September 11 2015 Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2016 Announcement presented by Haggar Clothing Company Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame April 4 2016 Archived from the original on April 7 2016 Retrieved April 4 2016 The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2017 Announcement presented by Haggar Clothing Company Retrieved 2017 05 22 Ryan Shannon Illini legend Mannie Jackson Notre Dame coach Muffet McGraw in Hall of Fame class chicagotribune com Retrieved 2017 05 22 Former Oregon Ducks QB administrator Tom Jernstedt named to Basketball Hall of Fame The Register Guard Retrieved 2017 05 22 permanent dead link Tracy McGrady late GM Jerry Krause headline 2017 Basketball Hall of Fame class CBSSports com Retrieved 2017 05 26 Rod Thorn Basketball Hall of Fame Retrieved 19 June 2023 Val Ackerman Basketball Hall of Fame Retrieved 21 June 2023 Lowell Cotton Fitzsimmons Basketball Hall of Fame Retrieved 18 June 2023 Larry Costello Basketball Hall of Fame Retrieved 19 June 2023 Del Harris Basketball Hall of Fame Retrieved 19 June 2023 Five Direct Elect Members Announced for the Class of 2015 by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Press release Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame February 14 2015 Archived from the original on February 14 2015 Retrieved February 14 2015 Katie Smith Tina Thompson Announced as Members of Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2018 Press release NBA Media Ventures March 31 2018 Retrieved January 14 2020 Nancy Lieberman Women s Basketball Hall of Fame Archived from the original on October 23 2009 Retrieved November 7 2009 Lynette Woodard Women s Basketball Hall of Fame Archived from the original on June 16 2011 Retrieved November 7 2009 Cynthis Cooper Dyke Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Archived from the original on February 15 2011 Retrieved August 14 2010 Teresa Edwards Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Archived from the original on October 16 2012 Retrieved September 7 2012 Dawn Staley Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on January 13 2014 Retrieved September 9 2013 Kim Randy Draft Oddities NBA com Turner Sports Interactive Inc Archived from the original on July 1 2010 Retrieved November 7 2009 Mercury Name Ann Meyers Drysdale As General Manager WNBA com Turner Sports Interactive Inc Retrieved November 7 2009 Bob Houbregs basketball reference com Retrieved November 7 2009 Matthew P Pat Kennedy Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on September 3 2009 Retrieved April 3 2009 George T Hepbron Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on December 4 2013 Retrieved April 3 2009 George H Hoyt Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved April 3 2009 Ernest C Quigley Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved April 3 2009 David Dave Tobey Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved April 3 2009 David H Walsh Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved April 3 2009 John P Nucatola Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved April 3 2009 James E Jim Enright Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved April 3 2009 J Dallas Shirley Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved April 3 2009 Lloyd R Leith Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved April 3 2009 Zigmund J Red Mihalik Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved April 3 2009 Earl Strom Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved April 3 2009 Marvin Rudolph Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved April 3 2009 Hank Nichols Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on September 11 2012 Retrieved September 7 2012 Richard Dick Bavetta Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on December 18 2015 Retrieved September 11 2015 Hugh Evans Basketball Hall of Fame Retrieved 18 June 2023 First Team Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved March 26 2009 Original Celtics Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved March 26 2009 Buffalo Germans Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved March 26 2009 New York Renaissance Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved March 26 2009 Harlem Globetrotters Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 5 2009 Retrieved March 26 2009 Texas Western Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 31 2009 Retrieved March 26 2009 1960 United States Olympic Team Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on February 15 2011 Retrieved August 14 2010 1992 United States Olympic Team Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on August 18 2010 Retrieved August 14 2010 All American Red Heads Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame CBS Interactive Archived from the original on September 7 2012 Retrieved September 7 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of members of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame amp oldid 1166056949 Contributors, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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