Wisconsin legend voted into Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame

Great news for a Wisconsin legend:

Wisconsin legend Bo Ryan was named to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame on Saturday morning.

Ryan appeared on the ballot in December and joins a 13-person class of 2024 that includes Doug Collins, Vince Carter, Dick Barnett and Jerry West (as a contributor). The class will be inducted into the hall on Aug. 17, 2024 in Springfield, Massachusetts.

Related: Tracking Wisconsin basketball’s reported transfer portal visits and targets

Ryan retired in 2016 after a 15-year run as Wisconsin’s head coach. He led the Badgers to a 364-130 overall record, 15 NCAA Tournament appearances, two Final Fours and one national championship game. He was a four-time Big Ten Coach of the Year and was annually regarded as one of the best coaches in the sport.

“I’m grateful and humbled by an honor like this,” Ryan said in a statement. “But I sincerely believe that this is a reflection of the contributions of so many people that have helped me in my career.”

The coaching legend was inducted into the Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame in 2017. He now earns the sport’s highest honor.

 

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Saints honoring Sam Mills’ Hall of Fame induction with ‘Dome Patrol’ poster for fans

Saints honoring Sam Mills’ Hall of Fame induction with ‘Dome Patrol’ poster for fans at Monday night game vs. Ravens; will you be in that number?

Now this is cool. Remember that iconic poster every teenaged New Orleans Saints fan had hanging in their room of the “Dome Patrol” linebackers standing tall in matching fatigues and gold wraparound sunglasses? Replica posters will be handed out to fans in attendance for Monday night’s home game with the Baltimore Ravens at the Caesars Superdome this week, featuring the legendary Rickey Jackson, Sam Mills, Vaughan Johnson, and Pat Swilling.

It’s a very appropriate commemoration for Mills’ long-awaited induction to the Pro Football Hall of Fame earlier this year, where a bronze bust in his likeness joined Jackson for time immemorial. Mills died of cancer in 2005 but his family and supporters kept his Hall of Fame campaign going, finally finding success when he was inducted as part of the Class of 2022.

So you can bet it’s going to be a joyous occasion celebrating this achievement with Mills’ family, friends, and old teammates. Will you be in that number?

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Cowboys legend Drew Pearson on Hall of Fame speech: ‘You know I’m going to cry’

The receiver known for his passion says his emotion will be on full display when he is officially welcomed to the Pro Football Hall of Fame.

Drew Pearson has never been shy about showing his emotion. Whether he was chucking the legendary “Hail Mary” ball into the parking lot in Minneapolis in 1975, turning the announcement of a second-round draft pick into a goosebump-raising motivational speech in 2017, breaking down on-camera upon not being selected for the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2020, or breaking down (again) upon finally getting the call to Canton in February of this year, the Cowboys great has always worn his heart on his sleeve.

But now that sleeve will be in the Hall of Fame’s own proprietary shade of gold. The Original No. 88 says fans can expect his trademark flair for the dramatic when he makes his acceptance speech this weekend.

“I was reading my speech this morning crying! In the hotel room! You know I’m going to cry,” Pearson told NFL Network‘s Steve Wyche and fellow member of the Cowboys’ 88 Club Michael Irvin. “I’m not going to hold it in.”

The honor is a long time coming for the three-time All-Pro wide receiver, who had to wait nearly four decades after hanging up his cleats for the recognition.

“You don’t really know how you’re going to feel once you get in and how it’s going to affect you,” the 11-year veteran said. “But after you get in and you feel the effect, oh man. First of all, as a Dallas Cowboy, you get respect. But now the respect’s at a different level when people come to you. It’s, ‘You deserve it,’ and, ‘It’s all about you.’ They ain’t talking about the team or nothing; it’s all about you. ‘You deserve it,’ ‘Waited too long,’ and all that kind of stuff. It’s everything I expected it to be.”

Pearson had already been to a pair of Pro Bowls before first-ballot selections Peyton Manning and Charles Woodson were even born. By the time bouncing baby Calvin Johnson entered the world, Pearson had been retired from the game for two years. Now they’ll all receive their gold jackets together.

“When we got together at the Super Bowl, my class, I’m there with three first-ballot guys and other great guys,” Pearson recalled. “But it didn’t seem any different; we’re all the same happy. We’re slapping the same fives. First-ballot, thirty-eight years; it didn’t matter. Because you’re in, and that’s all that matters.”

Due to the extra-large class size this year, the NFL has said they will enforce a time limit on acceptance speeches, which will be delivered over two days. Pearson knows it will be difficult to distill all of his emotion and passion for the game into just six minutes. (By way of comparison, tight end Tony Gonzalez went for 40 minutes during his 2019 enshrinement speech.)

“We’ve got limited time, but still, the emotion’s going to be there, especially when I talk about my mom and dad and my deceased brothers and sisters and stuff like that, wanting to get them involved. It’s going to be emotional, but it’s also going to be a celebration. And I’m going to focus on the NFL, the Dallas Cowboys- because they’re the reason I’m there- and my teammates that helped me get there.”

And even if the band has to cut Pearson’s speech short (at eight minutes), his place among pro football immortality will last forever. And he’ll finally be correctly referred to as a Hall of Famer… even if he’s already heard that unofficial tag for years.

“Before I got in, sometimes when I’d do a speech presentation, people would introduce me as a Hall of Famer. I’d say, ‘Do you know something I don’t know?’ Pearson joked.

He always felt he belonged in Canton. So, Irvin wondered, did Pearson accept the accolade anyway?

“Oh, I corrected them,” Pearson explained. “I said, ‘No, I don’t want to do that until I’m in.’ But now you can wear it out. Wear it out, man.”

Pearson will lead Sunday evening’s speeches, beginning at 7 p.m. Pearson’s quarterback and fellow Hall of Famer Roger Staubach will introduce him.

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