Live Jamaican Radio, Listen to Power 106 FM 24x7 with Dear Pastor Mon. - Thur. 9- 12 p.m. EST
(Advertisement)
The Jamaica Star Logo
ADD: Jamaicastar To Your Favorites / ADD: Jamaicastar As Your Home Page
 
HOME STAR FORUM CLASSIFIED CHAT
Google



Hotels fear boycott
Waterhouse aiming to defy the odds - Former champs struggle after mid-season setbacks
'Digicel Rising Stars' goes Host Hunting
What about death before dishonour?
Straining family ties
Tanya needs some luck
Tricky matter of trichomonal infection

Sport Email

NBA announces '08 Hall of Fame inductees


Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame inductees Hakeem Olajuwon (left) shakes hands with Patrick Ewing at a news conference yesterday in San Antonio. - AP

SAN ANTONIO (AP)

Coach Pat Riley, players Hakeem Olajuwon and Patrick Ewing, plus four others have been elected to basketball's Hall of Fame.

Also among the class of 2008 to be inducted in September are player Adrian Dantley, coach Cathy Rush, NBA team owner Bill Davidson, and broadcaster Dick Vitale.

"It's unbelievable, absolutely unbelievable," said Riley, the Miami Heat coach who won four NBA titles with the Los Angeles Lakers, then grabbed another two years ago with Miami. He also has one championship as an assistant and another as a player.

Ewing's Georgetown University beat Olajuwon's University of Houston for the 1984 U.S. college championship. Olajuwon got his revenge as a pro, leading the Houston Rockets to the first of two straight titles with a seven-game victory over Ewing's New York Knicks in the 1994 NBA finals - a team coached by Riley.

Olajuwon, from Nigeria, was a six-time NBA All-Star and the league's MVP in 1994. He was twice named defensive player of the year, and still holds the NBA record for blocked shots at 3,830.

11-time All-Star

Ewing was the 1986 NBA rookie of the year and an 11-time All-Star in a 17-year pro career. He was named to the NBA's 50th anniversary team, and won two Olympic gold medals in 1984 and 1992.

Dantley played for seven teams in a 15-year NBA career, and was named rookie of the year in 1977 and comeback player of the year in 1984, when he led the league in scoring. He also won Olympic gold in 1976.

Rush coached Immaculata University to three consecutive U.S. college women's titles from 1972-74 and was enshrined in the women's Hall of Fame in 2000.

Davidson has owned the Detroit Pistons since 1974 and the WNBA's Detroit Shock since 1998. Since then the Pistons have won three championships and the Shock two. He built the Palace of Auburn Hills, and chaired the NBA board of governors.

Vitale, a former coach of the Pistons, has been a college basketball broadcaster for more than 20 years.

 
April 8, 2008
 

Do you have a problem? Is something bothering you? Write to
Tell Me Pastor


Feedback | Disclaimer | Advertisement | Submission
Privacy Policy

Useful Links

Gleaner Online | Go-Jamaica | Financial Gleaner | Chat | E-mail | Web Cam |Go-localjmaica.com | Library Services | Newspapers in Education | Business Directory