Boston Sunday Globe

Carter and Billups lead 13-member class

- By David Brandt

GLENDALE, Ariz. — Vince Carter wowed the basketball world with his high-flying dunks for more than two decades. Chauncey Billups was a clutch guard and NBA Finals MVP for the Pistons.

Two icons from the 2000s era of basketball are headed to the Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame.

Tears welled in Carter’s eyes multiple times Saturday as he discussed what the honor means to him.

“I think that’s where the emotion comes from,” Carter said. “I have such a great appreciati­on for what this is and who is in the Hall of Fame. I get a chance to be a part of that. Say what you want, believe what you may, but there were some days I never thought I was on this level.” Then he grinned.

“But they allowed me in, so I’m going to take it.”

The 13-member class announced Saturday also includes former Lakers, Grizzlies, and Warriors executive Jerry West, who has already been inducted as a player and as a member of the 1960 US Olympic team. Also in the class: players Seimone Augustus, Michael Cooper, Walter Davis, Dick Barnett, and Michele Timms, coaches Charles Smith, Harley Redin, and Bo Ryan, broadcaste­r/coach Doug Collins, and owner Herb Simon.

The 2024 class will be enshrined in the Hall of Fame in Springfiel­d, Mass., in August.

“It’s mindblowin­g for me,” Carter said. “I enjoyed playing the game of basketball every day. I’m just overjoyed.”

Carter, 47, was an eight-time All-Star and the NBA Rookie of the Year in 1999 with the Raptors. He had the longest career in NBA history, playing 22 seasons for the Raptors, Nets, Mavericks, Grizzlies, Hawks, Magic, Kings, and Suns, and finished with 25,728 career points, good for 21st in league history.

He played in college at North Carolina under coach Dean Smith.

The 6-foot-6-inch guard’s longevity was legendary and he was a useful player deep into his 40s. He averaged 5 points over 60 games at age 43 with the Hawks in his final season.

Billups, 47, was a five-time All-Star and won an NBA championsh­ip with the Pistons in 2004. He was also the MVP of the Finals that season and is now the coach of the Trail Blazers.

Billups was the third overall pick in the 1997 draft by the Celtics, but his pro career was a little slow to develop. He eventually found a home in Detroit, making his first All-Star team in his ninth season.

Part of a balanced Pistons team that included Richard Hamilton, Rasheed Wallace, Tayshaun Prince, and Ben Wallace, Billups averaged 21 points and 5.2 assists per game in the 2004 Finals. They beat the Lakers in five games for the title.

Ben Wallace was inducted into the Hall in 2021. Now Billups joins him.

“We all came, watched [Ben’s] induction, and we all felt like we were already in, because he was in,” Billups said. “That’s how we played. That’s who we were. I’m just the next one up.”

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