The Day

Pop, Gasol, Hammon, Parker, Nowitzki, Wade head to Basketball Hall

- By TIM REYNOLDS

Tony Parker and Pau Gasol played for him. Becky Hammon coached alongside him. Dirk Nowitzki and Dwyane Wade waged battles against him.

He is Gregg Popovich.

And he, finally, is a Hall of Famer. The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame made it official Saturday, with three of the NBA's all-time internatio­nal greats — Nowitzki, Parker and Gasol — joining Wade, Hammon and Popovich as the headliners of the 2023 class that will be enshrined on Aug. 11 and 12 at ceremonies in Connecticu­t and Massachuse­tts.

"This is basketball heaven," Wade said on the ESPN telecast of the announceme­nt in Houston.

Much more

Also getting the Hall's call: the 1976 U.S. Olympic women's basketball team; former Purdue coach Gene Keady, a seven-time Big Ten coach of the year; former Texas A&M women's coach Gary Blair, who took two teams to the Final Four; longtime coach at Division III Amherst and two-time national champion David Hixon; and Gene Bess — who won 1,300 games as a junior college coach at Three Rivers Community College in Poplar Bluff, Missouri.

The late Jim Valvano, who as a coach who led N.C. State to the 1983 NCAA title, was selected as a contributo­r — also taking into account his work as a broadcaste­r and an outspoken advocate for cancer research and the V Foundation.

Hall of Fame chairman Jerry Colangelo told the new members or their families about the happy news earlier this week. Most of them joined Colangelo and other Hall of Famers on Friday for a welcome dinner of sorts, then on Saturday took their first public bows as basketball royalty.

"This class not only represents all levels of basketball — it represents truly, in every regard, what the game is all about and where it is," Colangelo told The Associated Press. "I mean, think about the candidates. There's the countries that are represente­d, Germany and Spain and France. It shows how far the game has come and where it is today. I think maybe it's the most unique class, I'd say, of all time, and that covers a lot of territory. It stands by itself as in its uniqueness."

The four NBA players — Nowitzki, Parker, Gasol and Wade — combined for 95,092 points, 39 All-Star appearance­s and 10 NBA championsh­ips. Hammon was a six-time WNBA All-Star and is coach of the reigning WNBA champion Las Vegas Aces.

And all Popovich has done is win five NBA titles, more games than anyone else in league history and an Olympic gold medal at the Tokyo Games that were played in 2021.

"He's amazing," said Golden State coach Steve Kerr, who played for Popovich and coached under him with USA Basketball at the 2019 World Cup and then the Tokyo Olympics.

"The Hall of Fame was just a formality. Everybody knew he would be there. It was just a matter of when."

The longstandi­ng belief was that Popovich wanted certain people in the Hall before he would allow himself to be under considerat­ion. Tim Duncan and Manu Ginobili had to go in first, and Popovich also lobbied for Houston two-time champion coach Rudy Tomjanovic­h. Parker going in with Popovich seems fitting, and Popovich has long raved about Hammon's ability.

"In all honesty, I always felt the Hall of Fame is like for Red Holzman, Red Auerbach and Larry Bird and Magic Johnson . ... I've never felt like I really belonged, to be honest with you," Popovich said. "I'm not trying to be 'Mr. Humble' or anything. I'm a Division III guy. I'm not a Hall of Fame guy."

 ?? STEVEN SENNE/AP PHOTO ?? San Antonio Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich points from the bench in a game against the Boston Celtics on March 26 in Boston.
STEVEN SENNE/AP PHOTO San Antonio Spurs head coach Gregg Popovich points from the bench in a game against the Boston Celtics on March 26 in Boston.

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