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Lessons taught at the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame

Free Press wire reports | 9/16/2021, 6 p.m.
Nine teams passed on Paul Pierce in the 1998 NBA draft, and if you think he doesn’t remember each and …

Nine teams passed on Paul Pierce in the 1998 NBA draft, and if you think he doesn’t remember each and every one of them, then you don’t know Paul Pierce.

The newly inducted Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Famer called out by name — in order — the teams with the first nine picks that year and thanked them for allowing him to slip to the Boston Celtics.

“I appreciate that. Thank you for passing on me. It added fuel to my fire,” Pierce, who had been expected to go as high as No. 2 overall, said in his acceptance speech in Springfield, Mass., last Saturday night. “To this day I don’t understand how I slipped to No. 10. But you know everything happened for a reason. Going to the Celtics, I’m grateful.”

Four months after the pandemic- delayed induction of the Class of 2020, including Kobe Bryant, the Hall com- munity gathered to enshrine 16 more new members — its biggest class ever. Many in the crowd wore masks; three- time WNBA MVP Lauren Jackson wasn’t able to attend because she was back in Australia in lockdown.

Bill Russell, who was inducted as a player in 1975, was honored for his coaching career. He is the fifth person to be inducted as both a player and a coach. But to former President Barack Obama, Russell’s greatest role was what he accomplished off the court during the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s.

“Bill Russell, perhaps more than anyone else, knows what it takes to win, and what it takes to lead,” President Obama said in a video. “As tall as Bill Russell stands, his example and his legacy rise far, far higher.”

Others joining the Hall were: Villanova Coach Jay Wright; defensive Detroit Pistons star Ben Wallace from Virginia Union University; four-time NBA All Star and Richmond native Bobby Dandridge, who was tapped by the Veterans Committee; two-time NBA champion Chris Bosh; longtime Portland and Sacramento Coach Rick Adelman; Washington and Sacramento All-Star Chris Webber; and two-time Olympic gold medalist Yolanda Grif- fith.

WNBA President Val Ackerman, longtime coach Cotton Fitzsimmons, scouting pioneer Howard Garfinkel were inducted as contributors. Clarence “Fats” Jenkins was picked by the Early AfricanAmerican Pioneers Committee, Croatia and Chicago Bulls star Toni

Kukoc was tapped by the International Committee, and Pearl Moore from the Women’s Veterans Committee.

Russell, 87, was honored as the first Black coach in NBA history. Taking over the Celtics from Red Auerbach in 1966 and staying on as a player-coach for two more years, Russell guided Boston to NBA titles in 1968 and 1969.

Russell was present and wearing a Celtics mask at the ceremony, but his speech was presented as a prerecorded video.

“Hey, Chris Weber, we’re going into the Hall of Fame with Bill Russell, bro,” Chris Bosh said. “That’s crazy.”

Bosh discussed his arrival in Miami, when Heat execu- tive Pat Riley offered one of his NBA championship rings and said it could be returned when they won one together; they won two, and Bosh finally returned the bauble on Satur- day night.

And he discussed his depar- ture, at the age of 31, when he was forced to retire because of blood clots.

“After finally making it to the mountaintop with so much more to do, in my mind, so much more work to do, it all stopped,” he said. “I eventually came to realize that we all have it in our power to make the most out of every day despite what happens, to turn setbacks into strengths.”

Ackerman was the inaugural president of the WNBA, the first female president of USA Basketball and, since 2013, the commissioner of the Big East. With few female role models to look up to in the business of sports, she found one elsewhere.

“I’m inspired to this day by the example set by Billie Jean King,” Ackerman said, “and the many strong women and men who followed her in the quest to make the chance to play sports, and to do it on a big stage, a reality for girls and women in our country and our world.”

Kukoc chose Michael Jordan and Bulls owner Jerry Reinsdorf as his presenters and alluded to the tension over his arrival in Chicago that was laid bare in the documentary “The Last Dance.”

“I would like to thank this gentleman here, Michael Jordan, and Scottie Pippen, for kicking my butt during the Olympics in Barcelona, and that way motivating me to work even harder to become an important part of the Chicago Bulls,” he said.

Wallace was emotional and poetic in describing his upbringing as an undersized big man who carved out a role on defense, winning defensive player of the year four times.

“Basketball was not my life. Basketball was just in my life. I took basketball and I created a path for those who helped me,” he said. “I took. I received. I gave back. I laid a path. I laid a track. It should be easy to find, I was stuck in it for quite some time.”

He walked off the stage with a raised fist.

Wright’s speech touched on Philadelphia basketball history; Webber gave a shoutout to Detroit. Dandridge said NBA opponents who went to major colleges looked down upon him because he went to Norfolk State College, now university, a historically Black school.

“My experience in HBCU schools was not limited to basketball,” Dandridge said. “I saw what having class was like. I witnessed dignity and a sense of belonging.”

Most inductees thanked their families and teammates and the coaches who helped them along the way, but Ackerman also gave a shout out to James Naismith, who invented basketball.

And Moore thanked the game itself.

“Basketball made it possible for me to travel the country and overseas, to earn a college degree,” she said. “And from shooting on a makeshift hoop in the yard in South Carolina to playing in the world’s most famous arena, Madison Square Garden.

“And tonight, having my name enshrined with the likes of those sit- ting in the hall is indeed a fairy tale come true.”