List of members of the FIBA Hall of Fame

(Redirected from FIBA Hall of Famer)

The FIBA Hall of Fame honors players who have shown exceptional skill, all-time great teams, all-time great coaches, referees, executives, and other major contributors to the sport of basketball.

Inductees

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Key:

Also elected to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame

Male players

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In total, 77 men have been inducted.

Year Inductee Nationality Pos. Achievements Ref.
2007
Alexander Belov Soviet Union
 Russia
2007
Sergei Belov Soviet Union
 Russia
2007
Emiliano Rodríguez Spain
2007
Bill Russell United States
C
2007
Radivoj Korać Yugoslavia
 Serbia
2007
Krešimir Ćosić Yugoslavia
 Croatia
2007
Teófilo Cruz Puerto Rico
2007
Dražen Dalipagić Yugoslavia
 Serbia
2007
Ivo Daneu Yugoslavia
 Slovenia
2007
Mirza Delibašić Yugoslavia
 Bosnia and Herzegovina
2007
Oscar Furlong Argentina
2007
Nikos Galis Greece
 United States
2007
Fernando Martín Spain
2007
Pierluigi Marzorati Italy
2007
Amaury Pasos Brazil
2007
Dražen Petrović Yugoslavia
 Croatia
2009
Bira Maciel Brazil
2009
Ricardo González Argentina
2009
Oscar Robertson United States
2010
Dragan Kićanović Yugoslavia
 Serbia
2010
Vlade Divac Yugoslavia
 Serbia
2010
Dino Meneghin Italy
2010
Arvydas Sabonis Soviet Union
 Lithuania
2010
Oscar Schmidt Brazil
2013
David Robinson United States
C
2013
Zoran Slavnić Yugoslavia
 Serbia
2013
Andrew Gaze Australia
2013
Jean-Jacques Conceição Angola
 Portugal
2015
Ruperto Herrera Cuba
2015
Michael Jordan United States
2015
Šarūnas Marčiulionis Soviet Union
 Lithuania
2015
Antoine Rigaudeau France
2015
Vladimir Tkachenko Soviet Union
 Russia
C
2016
Panagiotis Fasoulas Greece
C
2016
Hakeem Olajuwon Nigeria
 United States
C
2016
Juan Antonio San Epifanio Spain
2016
Manuel Raga Mexico
2017
Miki Berkovich Israel
2017
Pero Cameron New Zealand
PF/C
2017
Valdis Valters Soviet Union
 Latvia
  • EuroBasket MVP (1981)
  • 9× Latvian League champion (1974, 1979, 1982, 1984–1986, 1992, 1993, 1996)
2017
Toni Kukoč Yugoslavia
 Croatia
2017
Shaquille O'Neal United States
C
2019
Atanas Golomeev Bulgaria
C
[7]
2019
Alonzo Mourning United States
C
[7]
2019
Fabricio Oberto Argentina
C
[7]
2019
José Ortiz Puerto Rico
[7]
2019
Mohsen Medhat Warda Egypt
  • 2x Arab Nations Championship gold medalist (1974, 1987)
  • 2x African Championship gold medalist (1975, 1983)
  • Participated in 2 Olympic Games (1976, 1984)
  • 2x African Championship bronze medalist (1978, 1985)
  • 1x Mediterranean Games bronze medalist (1979)
  • 2x African Championship silver medalist (1981, 1987)
  • African Basketball Player of the Year (1984)
  • 8x Egyptian Player of the Year
[7]
2019
Jiří Zídek Sr. Czechoslovakia [8]
2020
Mieczysław Łopatka Poland
2020
Steve Nash Canada
2020
Modestas Paulauskas Soviet Union
 Lithuania
2020
Kenichi Sako Japan
  • 12× Emperor's Cup winner (1993, 1995, 1997, 1998, 2000, 2002–2004, 2007–2010)
  • JBL champion (1995–1998, 2000, 2002, 2003, 2007, 2008)
  • 3× JBL MVP (1995, 1996, 2000)
  • 9× JBL Best Five (1995–2003)
  • 2× JBL 3point field goals leader (1997, 2001)
  • 2× JBL assists leader (1993, 1994)
  • Japanese Inter High School champion (1998)
2020
Sasha Volkov Soviet Union
 Ukraine
2020
Jure Zdovc Yugoslavia
 Slovenia
2021
Mathieu Faye Senegal
2021
Panagiotis Giannakis Greece
2021
Stanislav Kropilák Czechoslovakia
2021
Oscar Moglia Uruguay
2021
Detlef Schrempf Germany
2021
Sergei Tarakanov Soviet Union
 Russia
2023
Ângelo Victoriano Angola
2023
Sony Hendrawan Indonesia
2023
Wlamir Marques Brazil
2023
Zurab Sakandelidze Soviet Union
 Georgia
2023
Caloy Loyzaga Philippines
2023
Yao Ming China
2024
Reggie Miller United States
2024
Kirk Penney New Zealand
2024
Romain Sato Central African Republic
2024
Pedja Stojakovic Serbia
2025
Alphonse Bilé Ivory Coast
  • 5x Côte d’Ivoire League champion (1973-1976, 1978)
  • West Africa University Games Silver Medallist (1975)
  • West Africa University Games Gold Medallist (1981)
  • West African Games Gold Medallist (1977)
  • All-Africa Summer Games Silver Medallist (1978)
  • 2x FIBA Afrobasket Silver Medallist (1977, 1980)
  • FIBA Afrobasket Gold Medallist (1981)
  • Played 12 consecutive years for the National Team (1971 - 1982)
  • Played in 1 World University Games (1979)
  • Played in 1 FIBA World Cup (1982)
  • National Team Captain (1976-1982)
  • African Selection Captain (1982)
  • Chevalier de l’Ordre National Madagascar (2009)
  • Commandeur Mérite Sportif Côte d’Ivoire
  • Chevalier de l`Ordre national de la République du Mali (2011)
2025
Andrew Bogut Australia
2025
Pau Gasol Spain
2025
Ratko Radovanovic Yugoslavia
2026
Dirk Nowitzki Germany
2026
Hedo Türkoğlu Turkey
2026
Wang Zhizhi China

Male teams

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Female players

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In total, 40 women have been inducted.

Year Inductee Nationality Pos. Achievements Ref.
2007
Liliana Ronchetti Italy
  • 4x Italian League Champion (1950-1953)
  • 3x Swiss League Champion (1967-1969)
  • 4x Top-scorer of the Italian League (1952-1954, 1960)
  • Scored 51 points in a game with Società Ginnastica Comense, which represents an all-time scoring record for a woman in a game of the Italian League
2007
Vanya Voynova Bulgaria
2007
Uljana Semjonova Soviet Union
 Latvia
2007
Hortência Marcari Brazil
2007
Ann Meyers United States
2009
Jacky Chazalon France
2010
Cheryl Miller United States
2010
Natalya Zasulskaya Soviet Union
 Russia
2013
Teresa Edwards United States
2013
Paula Gonçalves Brazil
2015
Anne Donovan United States
2016
Michele Timms Australia
2017
Razija Mujanović Yugoslavia
 Bosnia and Herzegovina
2019
Janeth Arcain Brazil
[7]
2019
Margo Dydek Poland
[7]
2020
Isabelle Fijalkowski France
2020
Ágnes Németh Hungary
  • 2x Hungarian League champion (1985, 1988)
  • Ronchetti Cup winner (1983)
  • 3x best Hungarian player
  • EuroBasket Junior silver medalist (1979)
  • Played in one Olympic Games (1980)
  • Played in one FIBA World Championship (1986)
  • Played in 8 EuroBaskets (1980, 1981, 1983, 1985, 1987, 1989, 1991, 1997)
  • 4x EuroBasket bronze medalist (1983, 1985, 1987, 1991)
  • Best European player (1985)
  • 2x European Selection
  • Record of 367 games with the Hungarian national team
2020
Shin-Ja Park South Korea
  • 5x East Asian Clubs League champion (1963 - 1967)
  • Played in 2 FIBA World Championships (1964, 1967)
  • Asian Championship bronze medalist (1965)
  • FIBA World Championship silver medalist (1967)
  • FIBA World Championships MVP (1967)
  • Recognized as the single most outstanding player in Asia for a period of 12 years
2021
Hana Horáková Czech Republic
2021
Penka Stoyanova Bulgaria
2021
Zheng Haixia China
2022
Lisa Leslie United States
2022
Robyn Maher Australia
2022
Catarina Pollini Italy
2022
Jurgita Štreimikytė-Virbickienė Lithuania
2022
Mame Maty Mbengue Senegal
2023
Yuko Oga Japan
  • 2x Japanese High School Champion
  • 2x National Sports Festival Champion
  • 2x Winter Cup Champion
  • 9x WJBL Champion
  • WJBL Regular Season MVP
  • 6x WJBL Best Five
  • 3x WJBL All-Star
  • 7x Empress Cup Champion
  • 8x Empress Cup Best Five
  • 2010 FIBA World Championship for Women Scoring Leader
  • Women's Chinese Basketball Association Champion
  • 2x Asian Games Bronze Medalist (2006, 2010)
  • 5x FIBA Women's Asia Cup Medalist (2001 silver, 2007 bronze, 2009 bronze, 2011 bronze, 2013 gold)
2023
Katrina McClain United States
2023
Amaya Valdemoro Spain
2023
Penny Taylor Australia
2024
Miao Lijie China
  • WNBA Champion (2005)
  • Chinese WCBA League champion (2011)
  • 1x Asian Games silver medalist (1998)
  • 3x Asian Games gold medalist (2002, 2006, 2010)
  • 4x FIBA Women's Asia Cup gold medalist (2001, 2004, 2009, 2011)
  • Debuted with the National Team at 16 years old (1997)
  • Played in 1 FIBA U19 Women's Basketball World Cup (1997)
  • Played in 1 FIBA U19 Women's Asian Championship (1998)
  • Played in 4 Asian Games (1998, 2002, 2006, 2010)
  • Played in 2 Diamond Cup Tournaments (2004, 2008)
  • Played in 5 editions of the FIBA Women's Asia Cup (1999, 2001, 2004, 2009, 2011)
  • Played in 4 FIBA Women's Basketball World Cups (1998, 2002, 2006, 2010)
  • Played in 3 Olympic Games (2004, 2008, 2012)
  • 2x FIBA Women's Asia Cup MVP (2004, 2011)
  • First player to score 6.000 points in the Chinese WCBA League (2011)
  • First Chinese player able to win both the Chinese WCBA League and the WNBA (2011)
  • 5x Chinese WCBA League Regular Season MVP (2002, 2003, 2005, 2010, 2013)
  • Chinese WCBA League Final MVP (2011)
2024
Danira Nakic-Bilic Yugoslavia
 Croatia
2024
Skaidrite Smildzina-Budovska Latvia
2025
Leonor Borrell Cuba
  • Debuted with the National Team at the age of 16
  • 3x National School Games gold medallist (1976-1978)
  • 3x Cuban National Champion (1986-1988)
  • University Games silver medallist (1979)
  • 3x FIBA Centrobasket gold medallist (1986, 1990, 1993)
  • 2x Pan American Games silver medallist (1983, 1991)
  • Pan American Games gold medallist (1979)
  • FIBA AmeriCup gold medallist (1989)
  • FIBA World Cup bronze medallist (1990)
  • 4x Pan American Games MVP (1979, 1983, 1987, 1991)
  • Played in 2 Olympic Games (1980, 1992)
  • Played in 4 FIBA World Cups (1983, 1986, 1990, 1994)
  • FIBA World Cup Top scorer (1986)
2025
Ticha Penicheiro Portugal
2025
Dawn Staley United States
2026
Sue Bird United States
2026
Céline Dumerc France
2026
Clarisse Machanguana Mozambique
  • Kodak All-American (1997)
  • Second-team All-American – AP (1997)
  • CAA Player of the Year (1995)
  • CAA All-Defensive Team (1997)
  • 3× First-team All-CAA (1995-1997)
  • CAA All-Freshman Team (1995)
2026
Ismenia Pauchard Chile
  • 15x Asociación de Básquetbol de Santiago Tournament champion (1953-1963, 1965-69, 1972-1973)
  • 7x National Championship winner with Santiago Selection (1954-1956, 1960, 1962, 1963, 1970)
  • 6x Opening Tournament winner (1961-1963, 1965, 1966, 1969)
  • 1x South American All-Star Tournament winner (1957)
  • 2x FIBA South American Women's Championship gold medalist (1956, 1960)
  • 4x FIBA South American Women's Championship silver medalist (1954, 1962, 1967. 1968)
  • 1x Pan-American silver medalist (1955)
  • 2x Pan-American bronze medalist (1959, 1963)
  • 2x third leading scorer at FIBA Women's Basketball World Cup (1957, 1964)
  • Played in 8 FIBA South American Women’s Championships (1954, 1956, 1958, 1960, 1962, 1967, 1968, 1970)
  • FIBA South American Women’s Championship Top Scorer (1968)
  • Played in 4 Pan American Games (1955, 1959, 1963, 1967)
  • Outstanding Athlete - 40 Years Revista Estadio

Male coaches

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In total, 32 individuals, have been inducted as male coaches.

Year Inductee Nationality Achievements Ref.
2007
Antonio Díaz-Miguel Spain
2007
Alexander Gomelsky Soviet Union
 Russia
2007
Henry "Hank" Iba United States
2007
Vladimir Kondrashin Soviet Union
 Russia
2007
Aleksandar Nikolić Yugoslavia
 Serbia
2007
Giancarlo Primo Italy
2007
Dean Smith United States
2007
Togo Renan Soares "Kanela" Brazil
2007
Ranko Žeravica Yugoslavia
 Serbia
2009
Pedro Ferrándiz Spain
2009
Pete Newell Canada
 United States
2010
Evgeny Gomelsky Soviet Union
 Russia
2010
Lindsay Gaze Australia
2010
Mirko Novosel Yugoslavia
 Croatia
2013
John "Jack" Donohue United States
 Canada
  • 3x FIBA AmeriCup Medalist (1980 silver, 1984 bronze, 1988 bronze)
  • 2x Summer Universiade Medalist (1983 gold, 1985 bronze)
2013
Cesare Rubini Italy
2016
Jorge Hugo Canavesi Argentina
2017
Dušan Ivković Yugoslavia
 Serbia
2019
Bogdan Tanjević Yugoslavia
 Montenegro
[12]
2019
Mou Zuoyun China
  • Managing highlights (while serving as CBA Vice President, CBA President or State Ball Game Department Vice Director):
  • 2x Asian Games for Women Gold Medalist (1982, 1986)
  • Participated in 2 FIBA World Championship for Women (1983, 1994)
  • Participated in 2 Olympic Games Tournament for Women (1984, 1992)
  • Participated in 2 FIBA World Championship for Men (1986, 1994)
  • Participated in Olympic Games for Men (1996)
  • Participated in 10 FIBA Asia Championship for Men
  • 4x Asian Games for Men Gold Medalist
  • 6x FIBA Asia Championship for Women Champion
  • Competed as a player in the 1st Olympic Basketball Tournament (1936)
  • Vice President of the Chinese Basketball Association (1956-1979)
  • President of the Chinese Basketball Association (1979-1996)
  • Former Vice President of FIBA Asia
  • Lifetime Honorary President of the Asian Basketball Association
  • Pioneer of Chinese basketball
[13]
2020
Svetislav Pešić Serbia
2020
Rubén Magnano Argentina
2021
Chuck Daly United States
2021
Tom Maher Australia
2021
Ettore Messina Italy
2022
Geno Auriemma United States
2022
Antonio Carlos Barbosa Brazil
  • Sul-American Championship winner (1995)
  • Panamerican Interclub Championship gold medalist (1995)
  • Brazilian Cup winner (1995)
  • Junior South American Championship gold medalist (1976)
  • Junior AmeriCup silver & gold medalist (1977, 1978)
  • U18 AmeriCup gold medalist (1996)
  • 2x Junior South American Championship silver medalist (1996, 2005)
  • Cadet South American Championship gold medalist (2001)
  • U20 AmeriCup silver medalist (2002)
  • 2x AmeriCup gold medalist (1997, 2001) and silver medalist (2005)
  • Olympic Qualifying Americas Tournament gold (2003) and silver medalist (1999)
  • 10x South American Championship gold medalist (1972, 1978, 1981, 1997, 1999, 2001, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2016)
  • 2x Pan American Games bronze medalist (1983, 2003)
  • Olympic Games bronze medalist (2000)
  • Pan American Games gold & silver medalist (1971, 2007)
  • Participated in 3 Olympic Games (2000,2004, 2016)
  • Participated in 6 World Championships (1979, 1983, 1986,1998, 2002, 2006)
  • More than 20 years coaching Brazil National Senior Team
  • 448 International games (330 victories)
2022
Milan Vasojević Serbia
2023
Alessandro "Sandro" Gamba Italy
  • 2x European Cup Winners Cup champion (1975, 1976)
  • 2x Italian League champion (1974, 1977)
  • Olympic Games Silver Medalist (1980)
  • 3X EuroBasket Gold Medalist (1983 gold, 1985 bronze, 1991 silver)
  • Coached 4 Olympic Games (1980, 1984, 1988, 1992)
  • Coached 6 EuroBasket competitions (1981, 1983, 1985, 1987, 1989, 1991)
  • 2x FIBA European Selection (1991)
  • Inducted into Italian Basketball Hall of Fame (2006)
  • Inducted into Naismith Memorial Hall of Fame (2006)
2024
Dan Peterson United States
2025
Mike Krzyzewski United States
2026
Ludwik Miętta Poland
  • Polish Junior champion (1961)
  • 6x Polish Cup winner (1959-1961, 1966, 1967, 1979)
  • 14x Polish League champion (1963-1966, 1968-1971, 1975-1977, 1979-1981)
  • Coached in 7 FIBA Women’s EuroBaskets (1964, 1966, 1980, 1981, 1983, 1985, 1987)
  • Coached in 3 FIBA Women's Olympic Pre-Qualifying Tournaments (1980, 1984, 1988)
  • 2x FIBA Women’s EuroBasket Silver Medalist (1980, 1981)
  • 2x coach of the Women’s European Selection team (1972, 1981)
  • Polish Basketball Federation Coach of the Year (1980)
  • Over 26 consecutive seasons, his team stood on the Polish championship podium 21 times, including uninterruptedly from 1962 to 1977
  • PKOl Award for "Promotion of fair play values"
  • FIBA Commissioner (1989-2002)
  • FIBA Women's Commission (1980–1994)
  • FIBA Coaches Commission (1980–1988)
  • Polish Silver Cross of Merit
  • City of Krakow Award (1996)
  • Commander's Cross of the Order of Polonia Restituta (2002)
  • Honorary Member of the Polish Basketball Association (2005)
  • Honorary President of Wisła Kraków
  • Honorary President of the Wisła Sports Society

NB:

Female coaches

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In total, 8 individuals, have been inducted as female coaches.

Year Inductee Nationality Achievements Ref.
2007
Lidiya Alekseyeva Russia
2009
Kay Yow United States
  • Summer Olympics Gold Medalist (1984 as Assistant Coach, 1988 as Head Coach)
  • 1x World Championship Gold Medal (1986)
  • 1x NCAA Final Four (1998)
  • 4x ACC Tournament Champion (1980, 1985, 1987, 1991)
  • 5x ACC Regular Season Champion (1978, 1980, 1983, 1985, 1990)
  • Jimmy V ESPY for Perseverance (2007)
2013
Pat Summitt United States
2015
Jan Stirling Australia
2019
Natália Hejková Slovakia
[7]
2020
Tara VanDerveer United States
  • Summer Olympics Gold Medalist (1996)
  • World Championship medal (1994 bronze)
  • 3x NCAA Division I Tournament (1990, 1992, 2021)
  • 14x NCAA Final Four (1990-1992, 1995, 1997, 2008-2012, 2014, 2017, 2021, 2022)
  • 15x Pac-10/12 Tournament Champion (2003-2005, 2007-2013, 2015, 2017, 2019, 2021, 2022)
  • 27X Pac-10/12 Regular Season Champion (1989-1993, 1995-1998, 2001-2014, 2021-2024)
  • 4x Big Ten Regular Season Champion (1982-1985)
  • 5× National Coach of the Year (1988–1990, 2011, 2020)
  • 18× Pac-10/12 Coach of the Year (1989, 1990, 1995, 1997, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, 2011–2014, 2018, 2021, 2022, 2024)
  • 5× WBCA District/Region Coach of the Year (1988–1990, 2007, 2009)
  • John R. Wooden Legends of Coaching Award (2014)
  • 5× Northern California Women's Intercollegiate Coach of the Year (1988–1990, 1992, 1993)
  • 2× Big Ten Coach of the Year (1984, 1985)
2022
María Planas Spain
  • 6x Spanish Queen Cup Winner (1978-1980, 1987-1989)
  • 7x Spanish League Champion (1975, 1976, 1978, 1987-1990)
  • 4x participant of European Cup for Winners’ Cup
  • 2x participant of EuroBasket (1983, 1985)
  • Pioneer & reference of Spanish women’s basketball
  • First & only woman head coach in the history of the women’s National Team (1978 – 1985)
  • Bronze medal, Royal Order of Sports Merit of Spain (2009)
  • Inducted into the Spanish Basketball Hall of Fame (2019)
2023
Valérie Garnier France

Technical officials (referees)

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In total, 14 individuals, have been inducted as technical officials.

Year Inductee Nationality Achievements Ref.
2007
Obrad Belošević Serbia
  • FIBA Silver Whistle Award (1977)
2007
Mario Hopenhaym Uruguay
2007
Ervin Kassai Hungary
2007
Vladimir Kostin Russia
2007
Allen Rae Canada
2007
Pietro Reverberi Italy
2007
Renato Righetto Brazil
2009
Artenik Arabadjian Bulgaria
  • FIBA Silver Whistle Award (1976)
2009
Marcel Pfeuti Switzerland
2010
Jim Bain United States
2010
Konstantinos Dimou Greece
  • FIBA Golden Whistle Award (1982)
2013
Valentin Lazarov Bulgaria
2013
Costas Rigas Greece
2015
Robert Blanchard France

Contributors

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National federations (8)

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The original eight founding member national basketball federations of FIBA, in 1932.

Year Inductee Major Contribution Ref.
2007
Argentina Argentine FederationFounding member of FIBA
2007
Czechoslovakia Czechoslovak FederationFounding member of FIBA
2007
Greece Greek FederationFounding member of FIBA
2007
Italy Italian FederationFounding member of FIBA
2007
Latvia Latvian FederationFounding member of FIBA
2007
Portugal Portuguese FederationFounding member of FIBA
2007
Romania Romanian FederationFounding member of FIBA
2007
SwitzerlandSwiss FederationFounding member of FIBA

Inductees (35)

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Year Inductee Nationality Role Achievements Ref.
2007
Nebojša Popović Yugoslavia
 Serbia
2007
Radomir Šaper Yugoslavia
 Serbia
2007
Borislav Stanković Yugoslavia
 Serbia
2007
Anselmo López Spain
2007
Raimundo Saporta Spain
2007
Willard N. Greim United States
  • President of the AAU (1944–1947).
  • Head of Joint Basketball Rules Committee, 1947
  • President of FIBA (1948–1960)
2007
Edward S. Steitz United States
2007
Decio Scuri Italy
2007
Antonio dos Reis Carneiro Brazil
  • President of FIBA (1960–1968)
2007
José Cláudio dos Reis Brazil
2007
Abdel Azim Ashry Egypt
2007
Abdel Moneim Wahby Egypt
  • President of FIBA (1968–1976)
2007
Nikolai Semashko Soviet Union
2007
Robert Busnel France
2007
Renato William Jones United Kingdom
2007
Turgut Atakol Turkey
2007
Marian Kozłowski Poland
2007
Ferenc Hepp Hungary
2007
August Pitzl Austria
2007
Léon Bouffard Switzerland
  • President of FIBA (1932–1948)
2007
James Naismith Canada
 United States
  • Inventor of the sport of basketball
2007
Eduardo Airaldi Rivarola Peru
2007
Dionisio "Chito" Calvo Philippines
2007
Yoshimi Ueda Japan
2007
Yoon Duk-joo South Korea
2009
Al Ramsay Australia
2009
Luis Martín Argentina
2010
George Killian United States
2010
Ernesto Segura de Luna Spain
2010
Hans-Joachim Otto Germany
2010
Abdoulaye Sèye Moreau Senegal
2013
Aldo Vitale Italy
2015
Noah Klieger Israel
2016
Juan Antonio Samaranch Spain
2016
David Stern United States

Current candidates

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These basketball players and coaches are eligible candidates to possibly become FIBA Hall of Fame inductees in the future.[17]

Male player candidates (64)

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Female player candidates (27)

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Male coach candidates (25)

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See also

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References

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