Texarkana Gazette

HOF announces ’19 finalists

-

CHARLOTTE, N.C.—Paul Westphal says it’s an honor these days to have anyone remember that he played basketball.

The Hall of Fame obviously remembers.

Westphal is one of 13 people who were announced Friday as finalists for enshrineme­nt later this year by the Basketball Hall of Fame. He’s one of four first-time finalists, joining seven-time All-Star Jack Sikma, five-time All-Star Marques Johnson and four-time defensive player of the year Ben Wallace.

“It’s hard to put it into words,” said the 68-year-old Westphal, who played 12 seasons—his best of those years with Phoenix—before spending parts of 17 more seasons as a head coach or assistant coach. “You never want to take anything like this for granted. It’s just a real humbling, thrilling time to consider that something like this might happen.”

There are nine previous finalists back on the list this year—notably five-time All-Stars Chris Webber and Sidney Moncrief, eight-time first-team defensive player Bobby Jones, two-time NBA coach of the year Bill Fitch, women’s basketball pioneer Teresa Weatherspo­on and four-time college coach of the year Eddie Sutton.

Also selected as finalists were Leta Andrews, who won a high-school-record 1,416 games in more than 50 years on the sidelines in Texas; Hugh Evans, a referee in the NBA for 28 years; and Barbara Stevens, the longtime coach at perennial Division II power Bentley and a winner of more than 1,000 games.

“To be named a Finalist for the Basketball Hall of Fame is a tremendous honor and we are proud to recognize the outstandin­g men and women who have impacted the game,” said Jerry Colangelo, the Basketball Hall of Fame’s chairman.

The 2020 class of finalists could—and likely will—include Kobe Bryant, Tim Duncan and Kevin Garnett.

There were four enshrinees who already know they will be honored at the hall’s induction ceremony in September. Longtime coach Del Harris and Portland Trail Blazers co-founder Harry Glickman were announced as winners of lifetime achievemen­t awards. And Curt Gowdy Award winners for media contributi­ons to the game went to Marc Stein of The New York Times and retiring Los Angeles Clippers announcer Ralph Lawler.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States