NEW ORLEANS (CBS SF/AP) — Former Golden State star Tim Hardaway, a member of the Warriors famed Run-TMC offense of the 1980s, was named Saturday to the 2022 class of Basketball Hall of Fame.

On the Warriors Twitter page, head coach Steve Kerr reflected on trying to cover Hardaway during his playing career.

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“Hey Timmy, congratulations on being honored by the Hall of Fame,” Kerr said. “I still have nightmares trying to guard the UTEP-Two Step.”

Hardaway now joins Run-TMC running mates Chris Mullin and Mitch Richmond in the Hall.

“Run-TMC is now Run-HOF,” Mullin proclaimed.

Others in the 2022 class include former Spurs star Manu Ginobili; former WNBA champion and two-time college national champion Swin Cash; former NBA and Warriors coach George Karl; long-time college coach Bob Huggins, WNBA champion and two-time Olympic Gold Medalist Lindsay Whalen; NCAA national championship coach and former WNBA Coach of the Year Marianne Stanley, and former NBA official Hugh Evans.

The class will be enshrined into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in Springfield, Massachusetts, on Sept. 10.

Ginobili spent his enitre 16-year NBA career with San Antonio, winning four NBA championships and twice receiving All-Star nods.

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Hardaway played 15 NBA seasons and was a five-time All-Star in the 1990s. Huggins is currently coaching at West Virginia.

Cash, who already has been elected to the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame, is currently an executive with the NBA’s New Orleans Pelicans. She won two NCAA national titles with Connecticut and a WNBA title with Detroit. She also worked as an executive with the WNBA’s New York Liberty.

Karl played in the NBA for five seasons in San Antonio before coaching for 27 years, during which he won 1,175 games — placing him sixth all-time. He was named NBA Coach of the Year in 2013.

Huggins has more than 900 NCAA wins in a college coaching career that began in 1977 and is currently at West Virginia.

Whalen is a five-time WNBA All-Star and four-time champion. She is now the head coach at Minnesota, where she also played in college.

Stanley, who is currently a WNBA head coach with Indiana, has spent 45 years in coaching, including 22 years at the college level with Old Dominion, Pennsylvania, Southern California, Stanford and California. She was WNBA coach of the year in 2022, when she also was elected to the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame.

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Evans officiated more than 1,900 regular season games, along with 170 playoff games, 35 NBA Finals games and four NBA All-Star games from 1973 to 2001. He also was the NBA’s Assistant Supervisor of Officials for three years after stepping away from on-court officiating.

Source: sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com.