The Province

Nash on hoop hall’s list

ALL-TIME GREAT: Hard-working high school star from Victoria went on to become two-time NBA MVP

- Patrick Johnston pjohnston@postmedia.com

Victoria’s Steve Nash, one of only 12 NBA stars to win two MVP awards, is a candidate for entry to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame

Steve Nash is now on the doorstep of basketball immortalit­y.

The Victoria-raised former NBA star is on the list of nominees for 2018 enshrineme­nt in the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

Nash, 43, first rose to local prominence as star point guard in high school for St. Michael’s University School in Victoria. He then played four years of collegiate ball for the University of California at Santa Clara, before 18 years in the NBA for the Phoenix Suns, the Dallas Mavericks and the Los Angeles Lakers.

The two-time NBA MVP is 82nd all time in scoring and holds the best free throw percentage in league history. He’s noted for bringing an uptempo style to the point guard position. He was at the helm of the league’s best offence for nine consecutiv­e years.

He was also known for finding an empty court where he could practice shooting, no matter what city he was in.

His former high school coach thinks Nash changed the game.

“The NBA is flying as a league,” Ian Hyde-Lay said Thursday over the phone from Victoria, where he’s still coaching basketball and rugby at SMUS.

“Many of the teams now are playing the way Phoenix played (when Nash was there).”

Under coach Mike D’Antoni, Nash led an offence that pushed the tempo, spread out offences, emphasized the pick-and-roll and saw the power of the three-point shot.

Stephen Curry said he patterned his game after Nash. So did Chris Paul.

At Santa Clara — the lone NCAA school to offer him a scholarshi­p — Nash was known to walk around campus, dribbling a tennis ball.

“His work ethic and his determinat­ion,” are what Hyde-Lay brings up when asked what he thinks about Nash as a teenager. “He was a great leader, even back then.”

Now, 25 years after he last coached Nash, Hyde-Lay said he’s not overly surprised to see how far he’s gone.

“In high school you appreciate­d that he was exceptiona­lly good,” he said. “I was never surprised to see him achieve at the next level.”

Hyde-Lay sent letters and clips of Nash’s play to 30 schools, but only Santa Clara’s Dick Davey took note. The coach came to Victoria to watch Nash and was instantly impressed.

“After seeing him, I was nervous as hell just hoping that no one else would see him,” Davey told Fastbreak Magazine in 1996. “It didn’t take a Nobel Prize winner to figure out this guy’s pretty good. It was just a case of hoping that none of the big names came around.”

Nash played for four years in Santa Clara (1992-96) before being drafted by the Suns. He didn’t play much in his first two seasons in the desert. He was traded to Dallas in 1998, where he finally got a chance to play and began emerging as a superstar.

A return to Phoenix in 2004 took him into the stratosphe­re. He was named the league’s MVP in 2005 and 2006.

Even before back problems forced him to retire in 2014, early in his third season with the Lakers, he was general manager of Canada’s national basketball squad. He led the team to the 2000 Olympics in Sydney, but hasn’t played for the team since 2004, after he disagreed with the decision to fire then coach Jay Triano.

Shortly after being hired as Canada Basketball’s GM in 2012, he re-hired Triano as coach.

Always known for his willingnes­s to speak out on what he thought was right, Nash protested against the 2003 invasion of Iraq and more recently has criticized U.S. President Donald Trump.

In 2006, Time magazine named him as one of the 100 most influentia­l people in the world.

He’s long been considered a candidate for the title of greatest ever Canadian athlete. A passionate soccer player and fan, he owns stakes in the Vancouver Whitecaps FC and in Spanish club RCD Mallorca.

On Twitter, Nash said he was “honoured to be nominated” and then paid tribute to his family, coaches, teammates and supporters.

The list of NBA players to have won back-to-back MVPs is not long: Bill Russell, Wilt Chamberlai­n, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Moses Malone, Larry Bird, Magic Johnson, Michael Jordan, Tim Duncan, LeBron James, Stephen Curry — and Steve Nash.

That’s elite company. Over the next months, the Basketball Hall of Fame’s committee will consider dozens of names along with Nash’s.

In mid-February, at NBA All-Star Weekend in Los Angeles, the 2018 finalists will be announced. Then at the NCAA Final Four the class of 2018 will be announced.

Don’t be surprised if Nash gets in.

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 ?? — CP FILES ?? Lakers guards Kobe Bryant, left, and Steve Nash chat during a 2013 game in Toronto. Many of today’s top stars, including Stephen Curry and Chris Paul, say they model their games after Nash, who was at the helm of the NBA’s best offence in Phoenix for...
— CP FILES Lakers guards Kobe Bryant, left, and Steve Nash chat during a 2013 game in Toronto. Many of today’s top stars, including Stephen Curry and Chris Paul, say they model their games after Nash, who was at the helm of the NBA’s best offence in Phoenix for...
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