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04/30/2024 05:31:24 am

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China Basketball: Yao Ming Continues to Break Boundaries after Getting Elected into Hall of Fame

Yao Ming receiving his Laureus Spirit of Sport award in Shanghai last year

(Photo : Getty Images) Yao Ming receiving his Laureus Spirit of Sport award in Shanghai last year. History was made when Yao was named as one of the inductees of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2016 on Monday.

History was made when former Houston Rockets center Yao Ming was named as one of the inductees of the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame Class of 2016 on Monday.

Xinhuanet reported that the announcement was made in a press conference in Houston last Monday and that the "Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame said that Yao Ming, who is from China, changed the face of global basketball as a respected player and ambassador of the game".

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"He led his hometown Shanghai Sharks to a CBA Championship in 2002 and was the number 1 pick in the NBA Draft the same year. As a member for the Houston Rockets, he earned All-Rookie honors (2003) and was named to the All-NBA Team five times (2004, 2006-2009). As an eight-time NBA All-Star (2003-2009, 2011), he broke the record for most All-Star votes, previously held by Michael Jordan in 2005. As the anchor of the Chinese National Team, Yao was named a three-time FIBA Asian Championship MVP," the official proclamation said.

While Yao's induction to the highest honor-giving body in basketball is definitely well-deserved as shown by the reaction of most of his peers, both players and coaches alike, it still expectedly drew criticisms from some parties mostly because of his incomparable statistics to those of the past inductees because of a career cut short by injuries.

Perhaps the most controversial disapproval came from former Indiana Pacers standout Jalen Rose, now a TV commentator and analyst, as he said that the 7-foot-6 giant "absolutely, positively" doesn't belong in the Hall", as per the New York Daily News.

While the statistics argument is valid, it should be noted that the Hall is not just about the numbers a player produced although it is considered, but is more about how someone impacted the history of basketball, and Yao indeed did that in so many aspects and ways.

Yao broke boundaries when he became the first Asian to be drafted no. 1 in the NBA and also when he achieved all the honors mentioned above.

ESPN's Ohm Youngmisuk wrote a comprehensive article describing how Yao "sprung a generation of Asian NBA fans around the world", linking two cultures, building respect from one another, and educating the public about racial stereotyping. It is absolutely not a small thing to achieve not only in sports but in all of life in general, but Yao did it innocently just by being himself and the way he carried himself.

He continues to break boundaries when he became the first ever Asian to be officially elected into the Basketball Hall of Fame and that is one achievement that would be hard to top.

The induction ceremony is set to be held in Springfield, Massachusetts on September 9th this year.

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