2026 Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame Class Announced
The Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame has just leaked its Class of 2026, and it is an absolute masterclass in basketball royalty. We’re talking rim-rattling dunks, no-look dimes, tactical genius, and pure, unadulterated hardwood dominance.
Reports from the ever-reliable Shams Charania reveal that Amar’e Stoudemire, Candace Parker, Elena Delle Donne, and Doc Rivers are all officially punching their tickets to Springfield. This isn’t just a list of great basketball personnel; it is a collection of trailblazers who fundamentally altered how we view the game.
Amar’e Stoudemire: The Phoenix Suns’ High-Flying Phenom Is Hall of Fame Bound
If you didn’t jump out of your seat watching Amar’e Stoudemire catch a Steve Nash lob in the mid-2000s, you might need to check your pulse. Stoudemire didn’t just dunk the basketball; he tried to send it straight down into the Earth’s core.
Before the league fell completely in love with shooting 45 three-pointers a game, Amar’e was the raw, explosive engine behind the “Seven Seconds or Less” Phoenix Suns. He terrorized drop coverages and made opposing centers look foolish on a nightly basis. He was a force of nature wearing his signature rec specs. When he eventually moved to the “Big Apple,” he carried the weight of a massive franchise on his shoulders and made the New York Knicks basketball relevant again.
If you know anything about the pressure cooker that is Madison Square Garden, you know that feat alone practically deserves its own plaque.
Candace Parker: A Generational Trailblazer
Calling Candace Parker a good basketball player is like calling the Mona Lisa a decent doodle. From the exact moment she stepped onto the WNBA hardwood, she completely broke the mold.
Parker didn’t just walk through the door of professional basketball; she kicked it right off the hinges. Winning Rookie of the Year and Most Valuable Player in the same season is the kind of stuff you do in a video game when you set the difficulty to “rookie.” She possessed the court vision of a point guard but was trapped in a power forward’s body, creating matchup nightmares for over a decade.
Her time with the Los Angeles Sparks, Chicago Sky, and Las Vegas Aces brought championship hardware to every single city she touched. She gave young girls everywhere permission to dream bigger and play harder.
Elena Delle Donne: The 50-40-90 Sharpshooter
The term “cheat code” gets thrown around a lot these days, but Elena Delle Donne was a walking, breathing cheat code on the basketball court. She is one of the most brilliant pure shooters to ever lace up a pair of sneakers.
Joining the ultra-exclusive 50-40-90 club—shooting at least 50% from the field, 40% from three, and 90% from the free-throw line over an entire season—isn’t just a testament to her skill. It’s a testament to her sheer perfectionism. The two-time MVP carried the Washington Mystics to a championship while battling through brutal back injuries that would have permanently sidelined mere mortals. Her resilience and picture-perfect jump shot earned her a rightful spot among the absolute legends of the sport.
Doc Rivers: From Gritty Guard To Championship Coach
You hear that raspy, commanding voice echoing through the arena, and you immediately know Doc Rivers is in the building. As a player, he was a gritty, hard-nosed point guard who never backed down from a physical battle. But it’s his tenure in a suit and tie that secured his spot in Springfield.
As a head coach, Rivers masterminded the 2008 Boston Celtics championship run. Do you know how hard it is to manage the massive egos of Kevin Garnett, Paul Pierce, and Ray Allen, and instantly turn them into a defensive juggernaut? It takes a special kind of leader.
He’s been a staple on the sidelines for over two decades, navigating the chaotic waters of the modern NBA with a steady hand, intense passion, and a quick wit that kept the media thoroughly entertained.
Waiting On the Hall of Fame Enshrinement
The official Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame announcement will take place in early April on ESPN2, with the actual enshrinement festivities taking place later in Aug. 2026.
