Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Women’s game earned Kobe’s respect

- TIM REYNOLDS

This long-awaited Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame enshrineme­nt weekend will be largely about Kobe Bryant.

Of course, it won’t be solely about Bryant, nor would he have wanted it that way. If he were here, he’d almost certainly be raving about the women going into the Hall this weekend with him.

Bryant was a huge proponent and supporter of women’s basketball, and that wasn’t just because his daughter Gianna — one of the eight people who died alongside him in a helicopter crash on Jan. 26, 2020 — was coming into her own as a standout young player with a bright future. He made no secret about how much he respected the women’s game, even telling CNN in one of the final interviews he gave, just 11 days before his death, that WNBA stars such as Diana Taurasi, Maya Moore and Elena Delle Donne could keep up with NBA players.

Make no mistake: The three women who would have shared the stage with him Saturday night would have had his respect.

New LSU women’s coach Kim

Mulkey has three national championsh­ips from her just-ended stint at Baylor. Indiana Fever vice president of basketball operations and General Manager Tamika Catchings has four Olympic gold medals. Barbara Stevens won more than 1,000 games as a coach. They’ll all get their time on the stage Saturday night in Uncasville, Conn., and they deserve far more than to be thought of as the “others” in this class.

“He made the WNBA cool,” said Catchings, whose friendship with Bryant dated back to when their fathers played pro ball in Italy together. “He made it cool for him and Gigi to be courtside. You could always see him teaching her different things that were going on on the court.”

Every incoming Hall of Famer is presented for enshrineme­nt by another Hall of Famer, and the women in this class got some seriously big-time names to fill those roles.

Catchings will be presented by NBA champion Alonzo Mourning and South Carolina Coach Dawn Staley. Stevens will be flanked by Connecticu­t Coach Geno Auriemma and former Notre Dame coach Muffet McGraw. And Mulkey is getting presented by none other than Michael Jordan.

Stevens retired from Bentley last year after 34 seasons at the Waltham, Mass., school and 44 years as a college coach. She won 1,058 games; the only women’s college coaches ever to win more are Tara VanDerveer, Auriemma and Pat Summitt. Vivian Stringer is 12 wins shy of Stevens’ win total; it’s going to be many, many years before another women’s coach gets close to that number.

“You look at all those coaches. They are huge names in the sport,” Stevens told The Associated Press in 2018 before her milestone 1,000th victory. “I don’t see the connection with me and them. I found my niche and I don’t need any limelight. What I’m trying to do in a small way is create a program that can be successful and that’s it.”

Bryant would have loved that approach, too.

He could champion women’s basketball and the WNBA sometimes without saying a word. The best-selling piece of WNBA merchandis­e is an orange hooded sweatshirt with the league’s logo emblazoned on the chest; sales of that hoodie started going wild when Bryant wore it while attending a Lakers-Dallas game with Gianna in December 2019. After his death, sales soared again.

He worked out with WNBA players. He mentored them. The luckiest ones had his number. They would get random texts, video messages, good-luck wishes.

“I respect greatness,” Bryant told AP in a 2016 interview. “I respect the ones who are trying to be great even more, the ones not afraid of the work.”

Catchings, Mulkey and Stevens are part of what might be the most star-studded Hall of Fame class ever: Bryant, Kevin Garnett and Tim Duncan as the NBA players with 11 combined championsh­ips and 48 All-Star nods going in together, along with two-time NBA champion coach Rudy Tomjanovic­h, threetime Final Four coach Eddie Sutton and former FIBA secretary general Patrick Baumann — one of the best leaders internatio­nal basketball has ever known. Baumann died in 2018 and Sutton died last year, about a month and a half after getting the word that he was selected for enshrineme­nt.

All nine earned this moment. Bryant, most definitely, would say the same.

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