The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame honors players who have shown exceptional skill at basketball, all-time great coaches and referees, and other major contributors to the game. A few entire teams have been inducted as well, including the Buffalo Germans, the New York Renaissance, the original Boston Celtics and the Harlem Globetrotters. The Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame's mission preserves and promotes the game at all levels and serves as basketball's ultimate library of history.
On September 28, 2002, the Hall of Fame found its third home in a new States dollar|$" target="_blank" >*45 million, 80,000 square foot (7,400 m²) shrine to the sport, located just south of the previous Hall of Fame. The facility's bolder architecture features a large, silver, semi-spherical structure (resembling a giant basketball) several stories high and a tall spire topped with an orange globe. The hall is surrounded by a shopping center of retail outlets.
Individuals who receive at least five votes from a seven-member screening committee in a given year advance to an Honors Committee, composed of 12 members who vote on each candidate and rotating groups of 12 specialists (one group for female candidates, one group for international candidates, and one group for American and veterans candidates); any individual receiving at least 18 affirmative votes (75 per cent of all votes cast) from the Honors Committee is approved for induction into the Hall of Fame. Advancement to the Honors Committee is generally pro format, although the Hall's Board of Trustees may remove any candidate who "has damaged the integrity of the game of basketball" * from consideration.
To be considered for induction by a screening committee, a player must be fully retired from play for at least five years, while a coach or referee must be fully retired for at least five years or have been active full time in his/her respective craft on the professional, collegiate, or high school level for at least 25 years. No temporal criteria is enforced for the election of contributors, who must have made a "significant contribution to the game of basketball".
Controversy has arisen over alleged improper influences involving the secret balloting procedures and membership of the Honors Committee. The Hall of Fame's most glaring blemishes include the presence among its inductees of several scurrilous or otherwise undeserving figures, as well as the absence of one of the most respected and influential basketball minds in history, Coach Tex Winter.
After the induction of the Class of 2006, the Hall will have honored 273 individuals (of whom 130 will have been enshrined as players, 73 as coaches, 3 as both player and coach, 51 as contributors, and 12 as referees) and five teams; Lenny Wilkens, John Wooden, and Bill Sharman have each been inducted as both a player (Wooden in 1961, Sharman in 1976, and Wilkens in 1989) and a coach (Wooden in 1973, Wilkens in 1998, and Sharman in 2004).
Basketball Hall of Fame | Basketball | 1959 establishments | Sports halls of fame | Springfield, Massachusetts | Sports in Massachusetts
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