Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Ginobili, Hardaway top Hall of Fame class

Joining former NBA stars in ’22 group are players Cash and Whalen, and coaches Karl, Huggins and Stanley.

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NEW ORLEANS — When Manu Ginobili reflects on the odds of a kid from Argentina growing up to win four NBA titles and Olympic gold, he sounds in awe of his athletic life.

“It’s one in tens of millions,” Ginobili said Saturday after an official announceme­nt that he has been selected for the Hall of Fame. “The odds are very, very slim and it just happened to me. I don’t know what happened, but I was the one.

“I happen to be an important part of two very iconic teams of those couple decades of both FIBA and with the NBA. Incredibly lucky and fortunate to be a part of those two.”

Ginobili, five-time All-Star Tim Hardaway and decorated former coach George Karl were the household NBA names in the 2022 class of Basketball Hall of Fame inductees announced in New Orleans at the site of the NCAA Final Four.

Also selected this year were former WNBA champion and twotime college national champion Swin Cash, longtime college coach Bob Huggins, WNBA champion and two-time Olympic gold medalist Lindsay Whalen, NCAA national championsh­ip coach and former WNBA coach of the year Marianne Stanley, and former NBA official Hugh Evans.

The class will be enshrined into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfiel­d, Mass., on Sept. 10.

Ginobili is a two-time All-Star who spent his 16-year NBA career with San Antonio, a major reason he’s going into the Hall of Fame. He similarly credited his long stint with Argentina’s national team that regularly was among the best in the world.

“I was a part of two incredible teams; if it wasn’t for being part of those two teams, I wouldn’t be here,” Ginobili said. “It’s not just about individual accomplish­ments. I never won a scoring championsh­ip, an MVP or even [AllNBA] first team. I’m here because of my surroundin­gs, of the players I played with, of the coaches I was coached [by] and the organizati­ons. I know I’ve been very lucky.”

Ginobili did leave his mark on the game in the way he employed lateral movement after picking up his dribble to get up shots in the paint. It became known as the “Eurostep” because Ginobili had played for a EuroLeague championsh­ip-winning team in Bologna, Italy, before coming to the NBA.

“I never saw that I created anything or brought anything new. I just played the only way I thought possible,” Ginobili explained, bringing up the challenge of trying to score against 7-footer Shaquille O’Neal early in his career.

“I was not going to go over Shaq and dunk, I had to go around people,” Ginobili said. “That’s the way my skill set and physical abilities found to get to the rim. I’ve done it since I can remember.”

Ginobili recalled Steve Kerr bringing more attention to the move when he commented about “how weird it looked.”

“I looked like a squirrel crossing the street getting to the rim,” Ginobili said, referring to his recollecti­on of Kerr’s descriptio­n. “That’s when I started to realize I was doing something a bit different and people started mentioning the Eurostep. For me, it was completely natural.”

Hardaway played 15 NBA seasons from 1989 to 2003 with Golden State, Miami, Dallas, Denver and Indiana.

Karl played in the NBA for five seasons in San Antonio before coaching for 27 years, during which he won 1,175 games — placing him sixth all time. He was selected NBA coach of the year in 2013.

Huggins, the coach at West Virginia, has more than 900 NCAA wins in a college coaching career that began in 1977.

Cash, who already has been elected to the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame, is an executive with the NBA’s New Orleans Pelicans. She won two NCAA national titles with Connecticu­t and a WNBA title with Detroit. She also worked as an executive with the WNBA’s New York Liberty.

Whalen is a five-time WNBA AllStar and four-time champion. She is now the head coach at Minnesota, where she played in college.

Stanley, who is a WNBA head coach with Indiana, has spent 45 years in coaching, including 22 years at the college level with Old Dominion, Pennsylvan­ia, USC, Stanford and California. She was WNBA coach of the year in 2022, when she also was elected to the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame.

Evans officiated more than 1,900 regular-season games, 170 playoff games, 35 NBA Finals games and four NBA All-Star games from 1973 to 2001. He also was the NBA’s assistant supervisor of officials for three years after stepping away from on-court officiatin­g.

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