Press-Telegram (Long Beach)

Finalists announced for basketball HOF

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NBA stars Chris Bosh and Paul Pierce, WNBA great Lauren Jackson and Villanova coach Jay Wright are among the 14 finalists announced Tuesday for the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame’s Class of 2021.

Those four are among the nine first-time finalists up for election, along with five previous finalists.

The Class of 2021 will be unveiled on May 16 and the enshrineme­nt ceremony is scheduled for September.

Bosh was an 11-time AllStar and two-time NBA champion. Pierce made 10 All-Star teams and was a Finals MVP; Jackson was a seven-time WNBA AllStar and three-time MVP. Wright led Villanova to two NCAA men’s basketball national championsh­ips.

The other first-time finalists are: Rick Adelman, the ninth-winningest coach in NBA history; fivetime champion and fivetime All-Defensive Team selection Michael Cooper; seven-time WNBA All-Star and two-time Olympic gold medalist Yolanda Griffith; NCAA national champion and WNBA Coach of the Year Marianne Stanley; and Bill Russell as the first Black NBA head coach (he was inducted as a player in 1975).

Previous finalists up for considerat­ion again are Leta Andrews, the all-time winningest high school coach; five-time NBA AllStar Tim Hardaway; consensus collegiate Player of the Year Marques Johnson; four-time NBA Defensive Player of the Year Ben

Wallace; and five-time NBA All-Star Chris Webber.

“While our timeline of events over the past year has been adaptable and reimagined due to the global pandemic, we have never wavered in our commitment to renovating our beautiful museum and recognizin­g the greats of the game who deserve to be immortaliz­ed there,” Hall of Fame chairman Jerry Colangelo said in a release. “Revealing the finalists for the Class of 2021 today is an exciting step towards honoring the men and women who have contribute­d greatly to the game we celebrate.”

The Hall of Fame’s Class of 2020 enshrineme­nt ceremony was delayed and relocated from Springfiel­d, Mass., due to COVID-19. It will take place at Mohegan

Sun in Connecticu­t from May 14-16.

Meyers Leonard of the Miami Heat apologized Tuesday night for using an anti-Semitic slur while playing a video game that was being livestream­ed.

Leonard acknowledg­ed that he used the term Monday, and said he did not know what it meant at that time. In his apology, posted on social media, he said “my ignorance about its history and how offensive it is to the Jewish community is absolutely not an excuse and I was just wrong.”

“I acknowledg­e and own my mistake and there’s no running from something like this that is so hurtful to someone else,” Leonard wrote.

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