Tag: Hall of Fame
Manu Ginobili is a first-ballot Hall of Famer as one of the best international players ever
Manu is an official all-time great.
The Spurs’ dynasty of five championships might be over but they’re far from done getting their flowers. It doesn’t stop at the steward of their run, Gregg Popovich, becoming the NBA’s all-time wins leader in early March.
The latest news concerns one of the more unique championship pillars ever to grace a court in any basketball sense: Manu Ginóbili.
A gifted and deft scorer for 16 years in San Antonio, it sometimes felt like Ginóbili wasn’t appreciated the way he should be. Those legendary Spurs teams that managed to beat Shaq, Kobe, and LeBron in so many big games never do so if they don’t have the Argentine on their side.
The folks with the Basketball Hall of Fame agree.
That’s why Ginóbili is being inducted on the first ballot.
Goosebumps. I have goosebumps
San Antonio Spurs icon Manu Ginobili will be a first-ballot induction into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame @Hoophall Class of 2022, sources tell @TheAthletic @Stadium.
— Shams Charania (@ShamsCharania) March 31, 2022
The Ginóbili announcement comes on the heels of the reveal of the entire Class of 2022, which also includes:
- Swin Cash — four-time WNBA All-Star, two-time Olympic gold medalist
- Tim Hardaway — five-time NBA All-Star
- Bob Huggins — two-time NCAA Coach of the Year
- George Karl — sixth all-time in NBA wins
With all due respect to these legends, it’s Ginóbili who is the unquestioned headliner.
Now at the age of 44 and since retired, Ginóbili entered the NBA game a little late. He wasn’t breaking the hearts of the Lakers in a black jersey until he was 22 — over three years after the Spurs drafted him. Instead of jumping to the United States right away, the Argentine decided to plug away a little longer elsewhere and play in Italy.
Oh and at the same time: His beloved Virtus Bologna won the EuroLeague in 2001 where he was crowned EuroLeague Finals MVP.
When Ginóbili finally decided to make the leap and join Tim Duncan and Popovich in 2002, it was all downhill from there. Not only was he an integral part of four championship teams, he was a player of unquestioned versatility:
- Two-time All-Star
- Two-time All-NBA Third Team
- Sixth Man of the Year (2008)
Sure, it might not seem like the most impressive ledger at first. But when you remember that Ginóbili most often came off the bench for the Spurs to light other teams up, you reconsider. He was a one-of-a-kind microwave scorer and the heart and soul of one of the NBA’s best-ever teams.
Ginóbili will enter the Hall of Fame in the conversation for the best international NBA player ever. Which, you won’t hear any argument for me. As a proud Argentine, he helped grow the league and the game on a worldwide scale, and then some. I’d even go as far as to say that his status as an international player comes before his esteemed reputation as a cog in the Spurs machine.
Manu Ginóbili is an all-time basketball great. It’s really heartening to see the powers that be give him, among all people, the flowers he truly deserves.
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George Karl: It’s the greatest honor of …
Manu Ginobili first-ballot induction into Hall of Fame
Manu Ginobili first-ballot induction into Hall of Fame
Shams Charania: San Antonio Spurs icon Manu Ginobili will be a first-ballot induction into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame @Hoophall Class of 2022, sources tell @TheAthletic @Stadium. Source: Twitter @ShamsCharania What’s the buzz on …
Source: Twitter @ShamsCharania
What’s the buzz on Twitter?
San Antonio Spurs icon Manu Ginobili will be a first-ballot induction into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame @Hoophall Class of 2022, sources tell @TheAthletic @Stadium. – 6:01 PM
A tres días de que anuncien que @Manu Ginobili es OFICIALMENTE INMORTAL….. pic.twitter.com/AiOVry1TUm – 12:54 PM
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Tim Hardaway to be inducted into Hall of Fame
Monte Poole. Sources: Warriors legend Tim Hardaway – the catalyst during the brief Run-TMC era – will be inducted into the Naismith Memorial Hall of Fame Class of 2022. Richly deserving. Joins teammates Chris Mullin and Mitch Richmond. Source: …
Source: Twitter @MontePooleNBCS
What’s the buzz on Twitter?
Sources: Warriors legend Tim Hardaway – the catalyst during the brief Run-TMC era – will be inducted into the Naismith Memorial Hall of Fame Class of 2022. Richly deserving. Joins teammates Chris Mullin and Mitch Richmond. – 5:47 PM
Doing some research for an article coming later, and came across this stat…
Since Jan. 26 (Mavs’ first game after Tim Hardaway Jr. broke his foot), Josh Green is shooting 48.1% from the floor and 39.5% from three and Reggie Bullock is at 42.2% from the floor, 40.5% from three. – 11:48 AM
For Mavs at Cleveland tonight – Mavs are without Spencer Dinwiddie (right knee injury recovery), and Trey Burke and Sterling Brown (H&S Protocols). Tim Hardaway Jr and Theo Pinson out also. Brandon Knight who was signed to a 10-day yesterday should be available. – 4:38 PM
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Tim Hardaway to be inducted into Hall of Fame
The can’t-miss family stories from Tiger Woods’ emotional World Golf Hall of Fame speech
“I asked two questions only, that was it. Where was the first tee, and what was the course record? Not complicated.”
Much of Tiger Woods’ World Golf Hall of Fame induction speech sounded like it could’ve been written for an audience of two – his teenaged kids, Sam and Charlie.
Woods went “retro” as he called it, telling delightful and meaningful stories from his childhood in a 17-minute speech that came from the heart rather than the teleprompter. Woods mostly told family stories. Many were relatable. Some were extraordinary. None involved a major championship.
All helped lay the foundation of the most impactful player the game has ever known.
Too young to play as a dependent at the Navy Golf Course in Long Beach, California, a 6-year-old Woods played in Saturday tournaments at Heartwell Golf Park, a local par-3 course. Woods said he spent the week preparing at the park down the street with his dog Boom-Boom, named after Fred Couples.
“I’d hit balls in the dark, in the grass, through trees, in the sand, through the hula hoops, everything,” said Woods. “So my dog, I’d only hit two golf balls. He would go lay down next to each one of them. Well, that’s kind of how I learned to play the game of golf.”
By age 8, Woods had learned how to turn the 75 cents his mother had given him to buy a hotdog and call home into a profit. Once his father, Earl, noticed that he started coming home with extra quarters in his pocket, Tiger was told no more putting contests for quarters.
“Fine, done, I won’t putt for any more quarters,” Woods told his father.
The next week he came home with a pocketful of dollar bills.
After promising that he wouldn’t putt for money again, Woods once again came home with a wad of cash.
“He said, ‘I thought I told you never to putt for money again,’ ” recalled Tiger. “I didn’t. I went out and played skins.”
From age 8 to 10, Woods would sneak onto the Navy Golf Course after his father got off of work just after 4 p.m. Woods’ mom would drop him off at the entrance of the course, and he’d make his way down what they called “The Ditch,” picking up golf balls until his dad came riding up on the third hole.
“So I would sneak down the first hole to the second hole,” said Woods, “but dad taught me how to always grab a piece of foliage, cover yourself up, listen for noise. If you hear anybody coming, lay still (laughter). Part sniper.”
In the wintertime, darkness would close in fast and Earl had a rule that if someone lost a ball, it was time to drive in.
“Part of understanding how to shape shots and knowing where I hit it on the face, where I would hit it all started then,” said Woods. “So if I hit it, Dad, I pulled it left, it’s up the left side, it’s going to be here. We’d drive there, it’s there, we can continue playing. The furthest I ever made was 17 holes in the dark. Never quite got to 18.
“One of the things that drove me was his passion to play the game of golf. I was never going to be denied to play. I loved it. I had this burning desire to be able to express myself in this game of golf.”
Woods, who named his son after Charlie Sifford, the first Black member of the PGA Tour, said his father instilled in him the need to be twice as good to be given half the chance. It’s the reason why Tiger made practice so difficult it hurt.
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As he got older, junior tournaments put on by the Southern California Junior Golf Association took the eager youngster to courses that had “CC” in the title for country club, which for Woods translated to an upgraded experience with fresh greens.
But Woods said not all of those clubs welcomed him because of the color of his skin color. As he got older, those prejudices drove him even more.
“So as I was denied access into the clubhouses, that’s fine,” said Woods. “Put my shoes on here in the parking lot. I asked two questions only, that was it. Where was the first tee, and what was the course record. Not complicated.”
Woods also touched on the financial hurdles his family faced, noting that when he was 14 ½ and wanting to compete on the AJGA, his family took out a second mortgage. The 46-year-old, 15-time major champion got emotional as he talked about his parents’ sacrifices and the work ethic they instilled.
When Woods turned pro, he immediately used the sponsorship money from Nike and Titleist to pay off his parents’ mortgage.
“I know that golf is an individual sport,” said Woods. “We do things on our own a lot for hours on end, but in my case, I didn’t get here alone.”
Before Woods pulled back the curtain on what shaped him into one of the world’s greatest athletes, daughter Sam introduced him and shared snippets of an intensely private family life that’s still being shaped by Earl’s “train hard, fight easy” philosophy.
With a good dose of fun, too, apparently.
“It’s been at the soccer fields and golf tournaments over the years that Charlie and I have begun to realize how famous he actually is,” said Sam. “I mean, how can a guy who still FaceTimes his friends to discuss Marvel and DC timelines and who goes to Comic-Con dressed as Batman be one of the greatest golfers that ever lived?”
Indeed, there’s so much left to learn.
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Mark Brunell will be the presenter for Tony Boselli during Hall of Fame induction
Boselli protected Brunell from 1995-2001 and their bond has lasted well past their time in the NFL.
This preseason is going to be a big one for the Jacksonville Jaguars organization as they will be finally sending a player into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in Tony Boselli. Jags fans were informed of the news three weeks ago during the NFL Honors show on Feb. 10 after Boselli’s patient wait came to an end.
Now, with his trip to Canton already set up, Boselli also announced who he’s chosen to be his presenter for the induction ceremony, and it’s a former teammate of his who Jags fans are well aware of. That former player’s name is Mark Brunell, the quarterback Boselli protected from 1995-2001.
Boselli broke the news that his long time friend would be the presenter on 1010XL sports radio Monday morning on “The Drill” with Dan Hicken and Jeff Prosser.
BREAKING: @TonyBoselli announces on #TheDrill this morning that @M_Brunell8 will induct him into the @ProFootballHOF.
Congratulations to both Tony and Mark! pic.twitter.com/Q0HqDtCqKw
— 1010 XL / 92.5 FM (@1010XL) March 7, 2022
Brunell, 51, is now entering his second season as the Detroit Lions’ quarterbacks coach under Dan Campbell. Before joining them, he also coached on the high school level and served as the head coach for Episcopal School of Jacksonville for eight seasons.
However, before becoming a coach, Brunell was a quarterback in the NFL for 17 seasons. Nine of them were with the Jaguar, and seven of those nine seasons involved Boselli protecting Brunell after the former Southern California Trojan was the Jags’ first-ever draft pick in the 1995 NFL Draft.
While with the Jags, Brunell started in 117 games and completed 60.4% of his passes (2,184-of-3,616) for 25,698 yards and 144 touchdowns. He also started in 117 games while acquiring a 63-54 record in Duval.
As for Boselli, he earned three All-Pro selections (1997-99) and five Pro Bowl (1996-2000) selections while with the Jags. That was good enough to get him in the Jags version of the Hall of Fame entitled the “Pride of the Jaguars” in 2006, but the NFL finally gave him the respect he deserves this offseason, and he’ll now be immortalized in the football community.
There was already a great deal of excitement surrounding the Jags between Boselli’s induction into the Hall of Fame and the Jags naming Doug Pederson its head coach. However, the news of Brunel adds to it as well as the news that recently broke about the Jags participating in the Hall of Fame Game.
Tony Boselli vouches for Fred Taylor to be Jags’ next Hall-of-Famer
“I think Fred Taylor is probably one of the most under appreciated running backs in his era,” Boselli said.
Tony Boselli finally got the knock on the door that he’s been waiting for to be told he’s headed to Canton, and he will now become the first Jacksonville Jaguar enshrined in the Pro Football Hall-of-Fame. The best part about the experience is that his good friend and current Hall-of-Famer Anthony Muñoz was the one to tell him, after long admiring his game.
Heading forward, it appears the NFL will follow this trend of letting current Hall-of-Famers make the announcement to the members of the latest classes. That means Boselli could have the opportunity to induct another Jaguar, which is a moment that would obviously be huge for the Jags’ first-ever draft pick.
In a recent episode of The Rich Eisen Show, Boselli was asked who exactly he would like to have the privilege of breaking the news to, and unsurprisingly, he went with a man he blocked for in Fred Taylor.
“You know, I’m going to bring up a guy who was a semi-finalist this year, he has yet to be a finalist in Fred Taylor,” said Boselli. “I think Fred Taylor is probably one of the most under appreciated running backs in his era. He has over 12,000 yards and he averaged 4.6 yards a carry. He gets knocked because he didn’t make All-Pro and there isn’t a big number of Pro Bowls [for him], but if you go ask anyone who played with him or anyone who played against him, there is not a more dangerous back. His stats back it up.
“Sometimes in small markets don’t get recognized. I mean, if a guy like that would’ve played in Dallas or New York in the big market with the numbers he put up and the way he played [he’d be in], he was a superstar. I saw it first hand and got to block for him. He’s a guy I think needs to get recognized and it would be pretty cool if I get to do that.”
It does indeed look like Taylor, who was Boselli’s former teammate for many years, has the best chance of any Jaguar to get in and the next hurdle will be to enter the finalist round. He has been named a semifinalist for three straight seasons, so his time to at least take the next step could come as soon as next year.
Taylor’s 11,695 career rushing yards total is currently good for 17th on the NFL’s all-time rushers list. The next three rushers who are respectively in front of him in Thurman Thomas (12,074), Franco Harris (12,120), and Marcus Allen (12,243), all are in the Hall-of-Fame, which may could be a good sign for Taylor.
Of course, a strong case could also be made for former receiver and teammate of both aforementioned Jags, Jimmy Smith, to get in the Hall-of-Fame, too. With 12,785 receiving yards to his name, he’s currently 25th on the all-time list. Despite such accolades, he has yet to make the semifinalists round of the Hall-of-Fame ballot, but more fans, players, and analysts have come out to vouch for him over the last few years.