- Source: Australian Basketball Hall of Fame
- Daftar hall dan walk of fame
- Daftar tokoh Yahudi dalam olah raga
- Australian Basketball Hall of Fame
- FIBA Hall of Fame
- List of halls and walks of fame
- Lindsay Gaze
- Sport Australia Hall of Fame Awards
- List of members of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame
- List of members of the FIBA Hall of Fame
- Basketball Hall of Fame (disambiguation)
- Andrew Gaze
- Greek Basketball League Hall of Fame
The Australian Basketball Hall of Fame was instituted by the National Basketball League (NBL) in 1998 as the NBL Hall of Fame as part of their 20th season celebrations. The NBL initiated the Hall of Fame to recognise the outstanding players, coaches, referees and contributors to the league. In 2010, the NBL Hall of Fame united with the Basketball Australia Hall of Fame to create the 'Australian Basketball Hall of Fame'.
To be eligible for induction into the Hall of Fame, NBL candidates must have fulfilled the following criteria:
Players must have made an outstanding contribution to the NBL, have been retired for a minimum of four seasons, and have played 100 NBL games or more.
Coaches must have made an outstanding contribution to the NBL, have been retired for at least four seasons, and have been an NBL head coach for 10 seasons or more.
Referees must have made an outstanding contribution to the league and have been retired for at least four seasons.
Contributors must have made an outstanding contribution to the NBL, and may be elected at any time.
As of June 2022, the Australian Basketball Hall of Fame has six members with legend status: Alistair Ramsay, Betty Watson, John Raschke, Lindsay Gaze, Michele Timms and Andrew Gaze.
On 1 July 2024, Basketball Australia announced that an entire team, the 2006 Woman's World Cup champions, would be inducted into the Australian Basketball Hall of Fame. It marked the first team to be inducted.
Inductees
References
External links
Hall of Fame inductees list @ Basketball Australia's website