KU coach Bill Self among HOF Mannie Jackson award winners

Kansas coach Bill Self has been named one of three winners of the 2015 Mannie Jackson – Basketball’s Human Spirit Award, the Basketball Hall of Fame announced Tuesday on NBA TV.

Self is joined by former Reebok CEO Paul Fireman and 14-year NBA veteran Steve Smith. The three winners will be recognized Sept. 10 at the Reunion Dinner on the Hall of Fame’s Center Court during Enshrinement Weekend. Former KU and Boston Celtics great Jo Jo White will be among those inducted to the Hall of Fame that weekend.

“It is an honor for us to recognize these three outstanding men for their humanitarian efforts,” said John L. Doleva, President and CEO of the Basketball Hall of Fame said in a statement issued Tuesday night.. “The Mannie Jackson – Basketball’s Human Spirit Award is a prestigious honor awarded only to those with this highest level of dedication to making the world a better place – each of these recipients is tremendously worthy.”

The press release said winners of the Mannie Jackson – Basketball’s Human Spirit Award exhibit qualities such as striving to improve the community, making a commitment to others, hard work and embracing the core values of the game. Beyond the game, award winners must reflect the values of Mannie Jackson’s life-long mission to overcome obstacles and challenge the status quo, while taking responsibility for his or her actions and seeking the highest standard of excellence.

Fireman, Self and Smith were chosen from a large candidate pool that represents every level of basketball and is reviewed annually by a distinguished Selection Committee appointed by the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame and Jackson, a  former star with the Harlem Globetroters.

Jackson saved the Globetrotters from near extinction in 1993 when he purchased the team.  In doing so, Mannie Jackson became the first African-American owner of a major international sports and entertainment organization.  In a short period of time, Jackson revived the organization and led the Globetrotters to record attendance and revenue growth while expanding the influence of the Globetrotters to more than 118 countries. Under Jackson’s watch the Globetrotters charitable contribution totaled over $15 million and in 2002 the Harlem Globetrotters were elected into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

Here are the details on the three winners.

The Mannie Jackson – Basketball’s Human Spirit Award Winners 2015

Paul Fireman – Massachusetts native, Paul Fireman, served as the Chairman & CEO of Reebok International for 26 years and is well known in the athletic community as a champion of human rights.  In 1986, Reebok became one of the first companies to pull out of South Africa because of the country’s practice of apartheid and two years later Reebok International sponsored the Amnesty International Human Rights Now tour. Fireman and his wife founded ‘The Paul and Phyllis Fireman Foundation’ in 1985, which focuses on ending family homelessness in Massachusetts. Through their foundation, they have developed One Family Inc., which advances the vision of ending homelessness by operating a scholarship program for formerly homeless and at-risk women. To promote permanent solutions to homelessness, the Foundation has joined with other donors to create Home Funders, a collaborative fund that finances very affordable rental housing for low-income families in Massachusetts.

Bill Self – University of Kansas Head Coach and the 2012 Naismith Coach of the Year, Bill Self, is one of the most respected coaches in the game. In 2006, he and his wife established ‘Assists Foundation’ to function as a fundraising conduit for organizations that serve a variety of youth initiatives in Lawrence and the surrounding area. Assists has helped fund programs such as Kansas Action for Healthy Kids, Lawrence Public Library, Boys and Girls Clubs of Lawrence, Kansas Youth Empowerment Academy, Ronald McDonald House Charities of Northeast Kansas and Head Start of Lawrence, among many others. The Assists Foundation has also helped create a program called ‘Winning Attitudes for Life’ within the school system for elementary through high school students to promote healthy living, physical fitness, positive well-being and self respect. The program helps students develop their leadership, team building, decision-making and communication skills.

Steve Smith – Michigan State University All-American, Olympic gold medalist and NBA TV analyst, Steve Smith, has excelled at every level of the game. In 1997, Smith gifted $2,500,000 to his alma mater to help fund the Clara Bell Smith Student Athlete Academic Center, which is named for his mother, who died of cancer during his NBA rookie season. He also established ‘The Steve Smith Charitable Fund’ and with a subsequent donation, fully endowed a four-year academic scholarship program that is awarded annually to one student from his former high school. The Steve Smith Charitable Fund also supports local charities in Detroit, Lansing, Grand Rapids and Kalamazoo, as well as in Atlanta, Georgia. Smith is currently a member of the Nsoro Foundation, a non-profit dedicated to enriching the lives of foster children and serves on the Hughes Spaulding – Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta Community Board, which is the largest clinical care provider for children in the country.

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