Daily News (Los Angeles)

Pierce among those selected to Hall of Fame class of 2021

- By Tim Reynolds

SPRINGFIEL­D, MASS. » Jay Wright used to sell tickets to games in the long-defunct United States Football League. Ben Wallace was passed over by every NBA team, some of them twice. Yolanda Griffith got a job repossessi­ng cars so she could take care of herself and her infant daughter while playing community college basketball.

For all of them, those days are long gone. Basketball’s highest honor has come their way.

Wright, Wallace and Griffith were part of a 16-person class that was announced Sunday as the 2021 inductees for the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame. Longtime standout NBA forwards Chris Bosh, Paul Pierce and Chris Webber were among those selected, along with former coaches Rick Adelman and Cotton Fitzsimmon­s and three-time WNBA MVP Lauren Jackson.

Pierce, a 1995 graduate of Inglewood High School, played his final two NBA seasons (201516 and 2016-17) with the Clippers after 15 seasons with the Boston Celtics and one each with the Brooklyn Nets and Washington Wizards.

He won an NBA title and was named Finals MVP in 2008 for the Celtics, who drafted him 10th overall out of Kansas in 1998.

The class even includes someone who has been a Hall of Famer for 46 years already — 11-time NBA champion Bill Russell, enshrined in 1975 as a player, has been selected again as a coach. Russell becomes the fifth Hall of Famer who will be inducted as both a player and a coach, joining John Wooden, Lenny Wilkens, Bill Sharman and Tommy Heinsohn.

“Special is only reserved for a few,” Celtics coach Brad Stevens said of Russell, the NBA’s first Black head coach, who was a player-coach after Red Auerbach retired. “And Bill Russell is as special as they come.”

Fitzsimmon­s was selected as a contributo­r, as were former WNBA Commission­er Val Ackerman and Howard Garfinkel, the cofounder and longtime director of the FiveStar Basketball Camp that revolution­ized how players were recruited and how many coaches taught the game.

Toni Kukoc, a three-time NBA champion with Chicago and two-time Olympic silver medalist, was selected by the internatio­nal committee. Clarence “Fats” Jenkins — whose teams in the 1920s and ’30s won what was called the Colored Basketball World Championsh­ips in eight consecutiv­e years — was chosen by the Early African American Pioneers Committee.

Four-time All-Star Bob Dandridge was the pick of the veteran’s committee, and Pearl Moore — a 4,000-point scorer in college in the 1970s, most of those points coming at Francis Marion — was selected by the women’s veteran committee.

Wright said he never imagined when he started coaching at Division III’s Rochester that the Hall of Fame would be a possibilit­y, and he’s championed the candidacy of one of his Villanova predecesso­rs — Rollie Massimino — for years.

But now, the two-time NCAA champion coach who was on the hot seat at Villanova after a slow three-year start to his tenure there is in the Hall himself. He had the ticket-selling job before getting into coaching at Rochester and turned that chance into a career like few others.

Bosh and Pierce were selected in their first years of eligibilit­y; Webber had been a finalist in each of the last five years before finally getting the call. Bosh was a two-time champion in Miami whose resume was still considered Hallworthy even after his career ended abruptly — and with him still at an All-Star level — because of blood clots.

Bosh was an 11-time All-Star, Pierce a 10-time selection and Webber was a five-time All-Star pick after a college career in which he was part of Michigan’s famed “Fab Five.”

“I’m just thankful, man,” Webber said.

Adelman’s teams won 1,042 games in the NBA, the ninth most in league history. Fitzsimmon­s was a two-time NBA coach of the year who coached, among others, Charles Barkley, Jason Kidd and Steve Nash.

Of the now 140 players from the NBA and ABA that are enshrined in the Hall, none of them averaged fewer points than Wallace — who managed 5.7 per game for his career. He never had a 30-point game as a pro; his regular-season high was 23 points, his playoff high was 29 points.

He was a four-time defensive player of the year, making that end of the floor his specialty.

“To have that type of journey, to have it end the way it’s ending, it’s an awesome feeling,” Wallace said on the broadcast.

Griffith once accepted a scholarshi­p to Iowa, then had a baby and wound up at Palm Beach Community College in South Florida, followed by Florida Atlantic — then a Division II school. Those were the days when she had the repo job, but she still got into the WNBA, won an MVP in 1999 and now forever will be listed among the greats.

“My journey was like a rocky, roller-coaster ride but I owe it all to my family,” Griffith said. “Without my family, none of this would be possible . ... This is for them.”

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