HOUSTON -- Dennis Rodman earned plenty of labels during his sometimes turbulent NBA career.
Here's one the player who created chaos on -- and sometimes off -- the court never expected: Hall of Famer. Rodman headlined the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame's 2011 class announced on Monday at the Final Four, a group that includes former Dream Team member Chris Mullin and Stanford coach Tara VanDerveer.
"It's just unreal," Rodman said.
And somewhat unexpected, at least to the two-time NBA Defensive Player of the Year and five-time NBA champion who believed his extracurricular activities -- including donning a wedding dress to marry himself and kicking a photographer in the groin -- would overshadow his on-the-court accomplishments.
"I looked at the way I am, and I thought I wouldn't get in," Rodman said.
Also part of the class were: coaches Tex Winter, innovator of the triangle offense, and Philadelphia University's Herb Magee; longtime NBA and ABA star Artis Gilmore; former Portland Trail Blazers center Arvydas Sabonis; Olympic gold medalist Teresa Edwards; Harlem Globetrotter Reece "Goose" Tatum; and former Celtic Tom "Satch" Sanders.
When informed of the honor last week, Rodman thought it was a prank. He figured there was no way the voters could get past his outlandish antics and focus on a career in which he became one of the best rebounders in league history.
"They looked past all the negativity and thought 'Wow, he actually did change the game a little bit,'" said Rodman, who averaged 13.1 rebounds a game while playing for five teams. "I wasn't a good scorer. I wasn't the best athlete. But I was part of the machine."
Even if he sometimes drew more headlines for his wardrobe than his ability to chase down missed shots at a remarkable rate. Rodman didn't disappoint on Monday. While the rest of the inductees for the announcement donned suits for the occasion, he wore sneakers, jeans, a black ball cap, shades, a tan vest with leopard and tan scarves, and his white shirt with gold sequined cuffs was unbuttoned and knotted at the waist, a la Julia Roberts in "Pretty Woman."
"Dennis was obviously a personality," said John Paxson, the Bulls' vice president of basketball operations and former player who retired the season before Rodman joined the team. "When the lights were turned on, Dennis became Dennis. ... There's a lot of good rebounders in the league now, but Dennis, at that time, I think the thing that made him stand apart was every time you watched him you knew the effort he was putting into that part of the game."
Expect something off the wall when the class is formally inducted in Springfield, Mass., in August. Rodman said his personal designer is going to "make a lot of crazy stuff."
Mullin, a five-time All-Star and St. John's all-time leading scorer, will be making his second trip to the induction ceremonies in as many years. He was enshrined last summer as part of the 1992 U.S. Olympic basketball team.
Standing a few feet from Rodman, the straitlaced Mullin, complete with crew cut, pointed to the dynamic personalities in the group as proof of basketball's global reach.
"That's what this game is about, anyone can contribute," he said.
For VanDerveer, Monday's announcement was bittersweet, coming just hours after her Stanford team lost 63-62 to Texas A&M in a national semifinal in Indianapolis.
"This is kind of a tough morning to be a basketball coach for me waking up after our loss last night," she said on a conference call. "This opportunity to be enshrined in Naismith is an incredible honor, and I'm overwhelmed by it."
In December, VanDerveer became the sixth woman to get 800 coaching victories.
"It's the ultimate compliment to a coach or basketball player," she said. "I'm humbled and honored. You should be really excited about it, but I wish it hadn't come on this day. I'm not feeling great about myself or how we played. You go back and think about all the things I could have done or should have done. The sun didn't come up this morning here."
For longtime Philadelphia University coach Magee, the all-time, all-division NCAA wins leader with 922 career victories, this is heady territory. He got into coaching only after turning down an offer to work for a chemical company.
"I coached the JV team when I first got started and we had some success and I knew this is what I should be doing," Magee said.
Winter, the triangle offense innovator who helped the Chicago Bulls and Los Angeles Lakers win nine NBA championships as an assistant to Phil Jackson, retired following the 2006 season, capping a career that included a successful stint at Kansas State, where he led the Wildcats to two Final Fours.
"I'm really happy for Tex and his family," Paxson said, "because I think a lot of times when you're looking at the Hall of Fame, you're looking at numbers and records, as opposed to the contribution of what an individual gives to the game. And I have perspective on Tex because I was able to see him in a unique capacity. Tex was the ultimate teacher of basketball. And I firmly believe that in a lot of ways it's a lost art.
"We don't have the teachers we once had," Paxson added. "And Tex always approached the practice floor as a classroom, to educate, and to give his knowledge and wisdom to you as a player. And he was meticulous in how he approached the triangle in particular, the fundamentals to make it work, the options off of it. He had a brilliant mind. And it's great for him, and it's great for the Bulls organization, the Lakers organization, all of us who had an opportunity to be around him."
Edwards, who won four gold medals while playing on five U.S. Olympic teams, starred at Georgia, taking the Bulldogs to two Final Fours, before enjoying a lengthy professional career both in the U.S. and overseas. Edwards is now the director of player personnel for the WNBA's Tulsa Shock.
"I feel like the little girl gets to play with all the big boys
again," Edwards said. "It's like how I started, going from
begging to play with them to being the first one chosen. I feel
like this time I get to share the spotlight with the biggest boys
in the world."
Gilmore, a member of the all-time ABA team and a six-time NBA All-Star who scored more than 24,000 career points, was elected by the Hall's ABA committee.
The class also includes Sabonis, one of the greatest passing centers in basketball history. The Lithuanian-born Sabonis was among the first European players to successfully transition to the NBA, spending nearly a decade with the Blazers.
Information from The Associated Press and ESPNChicago.com was used in this report.