Los Angeles Times

Mourning never quit on goal

Former center heads Hall of Fame class after overcoming kidney disease and a transplant to win NBA championsh­ip with the Heat.

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SPRINGFIEL­D, Mass. — Alonzo Mourning first thanked all of the usual people when he was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame: his coaches, his teachers, and the foster mother who raised him.

Then he turned to those who made it possible for his unique journey to the sport’s highest honor.

With one of the doctors who performed his kidney transplant in attendance, the former Georgetown and Miami Heat star discussed the disease that threatened his life and almost ended his career. He also thanked his cousin-turned-kidney donor, Jason Cooper.

“There was such purpose to my life at that point and I never doubted — no matter how long the odds — that it was possible,” Mourning said during Friday night’s induction ceremony. “I just thought, ‘This is much bigger than me.’ I had a goal set to win a championsh­ip that was denied when I got kidney disease.”

Mourning returned to win the 2006 NBA title with the Heat and complete a career that led him to the Springfiel­d shrine. He was inducted in a class that also included former NBA Commission­er David Stern, NCAA championsh­ip-winning coaches Nolan Richardson and Gary Williams and sixtime NBA All-Star Mitch Richmond.

The women’s team from Immaculata College was also honored, along with Lithuania star Sarunas Marciulion­is. Former Indiana Pacers coach Bob “Slick” Leonard, the late Nat “Sweetwater” Clifton of the New York Knicks and the late Guy Rodgers of Temple rounded out the class.

Stern was honored for his three decades of leadership that transforme­d the league from struggling teams and tape-delayed finals to an internatio­nal juggernaut. His introducto­ry video included praise from NBA stars Michael Jordan, Bill Russell and Magic Johnson but also from Nelson Mandela.

“Everything we do is always about the game,” Stern said, asking the entire crowd to stand so he could thank the former players, fans and family members who made the league’s success possible. “The reason I’m here is because of thousands of people over the years who have done so much.”

Arkansas’ Richardson celebrated his induction with a revival-style speech peppered with swipes at referees and jokes about God and the devil playing basketball.

Leonard,82, the winningest coach in ABA history, followed by accenting his quiet tone with a Southern drawl and guessing that he was one of the oldest inductees in the Hall’s history. “For me, it took a while,” Leonard said, “but I’m going out in style.”

 ?? Jim Rogash Getty Images ?? NOLAN RICHARDSON, right, gets a hand from Nate Archibald, left, as John Thompson laughs during Hall of Fame enshrineme­nt ceremony.
Jim Rogash Getty Images NOLAN RICHARDSON, right, gets a hand from Nate Archibald, left, as John Thompson laughs during Hall of Fame enshrineme­nt ceremony.

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