Reports: Bryant, 7 others elected
to Basketball Hall
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[April 04, 2020]
All eight finalists for enshrinement in the Naismith Memorial
Basketball Hall of Fame, headed by the late Kobe Bryant, will be
inducted, according to various media reports Friday.
The other reported members of the Hall's Class of 2020 will be Tim
Duncan, Kevin Garnett, Eddie Sutton, Rudy Tomjanovich, Tamika
Catchings, Kim Mulkey and Barbara Stevens.
Bryant, Duncan, Garnett and Catchings all are first-time finalists.
Nominees needed to received at least 18 votes from the 24 electors
to be enshrined.
The official announcement will be made Saturday at noon ET on ESPN.
The news normally is revealed at the site of the NCAA men's
basketball Final Four, which this year would have been Atlanta, but
the entire NCAA Tournament was canceled due to the coronavirus
outbreak.
The Athletic's Shams Charania reported that Bryant, Duncan and
Garnett were elected.
The Tulsa World broke the news about Sutton, with ESPN adding that
it confirmed the report.
Fox 26 Houston and the Houston Chronicle reported that Tomjanovich
was voted in, while longtime women's basketball reporter Mel
Greenberg tweeted that Catchings, Mulkey and Stevens were elected.
Bryant died Jan. 26 at 41 in a helicopter crash. He was an 18-time
All-Star, five-time NBA champion, two-time scoring champion and the
2007-08 Most Valuable Player. The Los Angeles Lakers great ranks
fourth in NBA history in points, and he was selected to the
All-Defensive team 12 times.
Duncan, 43, was a 15-time All-Star, five-time NBA champion and the
MVP in 2001-02 and 2002-03. The San Antonio Spurs stalwart received
15 All-Defensive nods and was a three-time NBA Finals MVP.
Garnett, 43, was a 15-time All-Star, an NBA champion with the Boston
Celtics in 2007-08 and the league MVP in 2003-04. He played the
majority of his career with the Minnesota Timberwolves and had a
brief stint with the Brooklyn Nets.
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General overall view of
the retired Los Angeles Nos. 2 and 28 jerseys of Kobe Bryant at the
Staples Center. Mandatory Credit: Kirby Lee-USA TODAY Sports
Sutton, 84, coached Creighton, Arkansas, Kentucky and Oklahoma State
to the NCAA Tournament, reaching the Final Four three times.
Including a brief stint at San Francisco, he wound up with an
804-328 career record.
Tomjanovich, 71, coached the Houston Rockets to NBA championship in
1993-94 and 1994-95. He also averaged 17.4 points and 8.1 rebounds
in 11 seasons as a player with the Rockets, and he was an
All-American for Michigan, where he remains the all-time leading
rebounder and is second in scoring average.
Catchings, 40, was a 10-time All-Star in 15 years with the WNBA's
Indiana Fever. She was the MVP of the WNBA Finals as the Fever won
the league title in 2012, a year after she was the regular-season
MVP. She was a five-time WNBA Defensive Player of the Year.
Mulkey, 57, was inducted into the Hall of Fame as a player in 2000,
and now she is entering as a coach. She led Baylor to NCAA titles in
2004, 2012 and 2019, and she was selected the USBWA National Coach
of the Year in 2011, 2012 and 2019.
Stevens, 65, has amassed a total of 1,039 coaching wins for three
Massachusetts programs: Clark, UMass and Bentley. A five-time WBCA
Division II National Coach of the year, she led Bentley to the 2014
Division II title.
--Field Level Media
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