Four-time NBA All-Star Kemba Walker retired from basketball on Tuesday after 12 seasons. The former UConn standout spent the past season overseas at AS Monaco and last played in the NBA during the 2022-23 campaign for the Dallas Mavericks.
While Walker’s NBA credentials (over 14,000 career points, four-time NBA All-Star and a third-team All-NBA selection) are among the best in his draft class, his chances of making the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame are slim. Basketball Reference only gives Walker a 15.1% chance of earning a spot in basketball’s most hallowed halls.
Yes, Walker’s substantial college resume should bolster his chances for a place among basketball’s immortal names in Springfield, Massachusetts. He averaged 16.1 points per game during his time at UConn, including 23.5 per game in his final season. That year Walker led his team to an NCAA title, earned Consensus First-Team All-American honors and was a Final Four MVP.
But Hall of Fame voters rarely give college merits the same recognition as NBA accomplishments. For example, Duke’s Christian Laettner — one of the most decorated college basketball players in the modern era — still lacks an individual spot in the Hall of Fame (though he is enshrined as a member of the 1992 Olympic Dream Team).
While Walker looks like a longshot for the Hall of Fame at this point, it doesn’t take anything away from his legendary college career. Since he is hanging it up for good, this is a perfect time to look back at some of his most iconic moments in a UConn uniform.
Walker scores 42 against Vermont
In UConn’s second game of the 2010-11 season, Walker posted a career-high 42 points to go along with eight rebounds and three assists in an 89-73 win. Walker would follow that performance with four consecutive games with at least 29 points, including a 31-point outburst against Wichita State in the opening round of the Maui…
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