SAN ANTONIO - Broadcaster Dick Vitale, a man who had limited success as a coach but brought the game of basketball to millions of TV watchers, was selected to the game's Hall of Fame on Monday alongside Pat Riley, one of the most successful NBA coaches of all time.
Overcome with emotion, Vitale broke into tears during the announcement in San Antonio, site of the NCAA Men's Final Four.
“I can't run, can't jump, can't shoot, but just have had a tremendous - I'd like to think - passion about the game,” said Vitale, who had a short stint as an NBA coach in the late 1970s but made his name as a college basketball analyst.
Others in the Class of 2008 were Hakeem Olajuwon and Patrick Ewing, two greats who battled on the court for years; player Adrian Dantley; coach Cathy Rush; and William Davidson, owner of the Detroit Pistons since 1974.
Over the decades, Vitale created his own lexicon with phrases such as “Get a T-O, baby,” “You're a P-T-Per,” and “Awesome, baby.”
No matter how strong their credentials, each member of the Class of 2008 seemed a bit star-struck.
Riley, the third-winningest NBA coach ever, called his election “unbelievable, absolutely unbelievable.”
Olajuwon and Ewing both played in three Final Fours, with Ewing's Georgetown team beating Olajuwon's Houston squad for the 1984 national championship.
Dantley, a six-time NBA All-Star, played for seven teams during his 15-year NBA career.
“I can't run, can't jump, can't shoot, but just have had a tremendous - I'd like to think - passion about the game,” said Vitale, who had a short stint as an NBA coach in the late 1970s but made his name as a college basketball analyst.
Others in the Class of 2008 were Hakeem Olajuwon and Patrick Ewing, two greats who battled on the court for years; player Adrian Dantley; coach Cathy Rush; and William Davidson, owner of the Detroit Pistons since 1974.
Over the decades, Vitale created his own lexicon with phrases such as “Get a T-O, baby,” “You're a P-T-Per,” and “Awesome, baby.”
No matter how strong their credentials, each member of the Class of 2008 seemed a bit star-struck.
Riley, the third-winningest NBA coach ever, called his election “unbelievable, absolutely unbelievable.”
Olajuwon and Ewing both played in three Final Fours, with Ewing's Georgetown team beating Olajuwon's Houston squad for the 1984 national championship.
Dantley, a six-time NBA All-Star, played for seven teams during his 15-year NBA career.
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