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Chris Bosh is a certain NBA Hall of Famer - whatever way you look at it

Two-time NBA champion honoured with emotional jersey retirement ceremony in Miami

Chris Bosh in action for the Miami Heat in the 2014 Finals
Image: Chris Bosh in action for the Miami Heat in the 2014 Finals

Chris Bosh is a surefire entrant into the NBA Hall of Fame, whether you gauge his achievements on titles, statistics or the testimony of his former team-mates and coaches.

There are many paths to getting into the Basketball Hall of Fame. Win a lot of championships. Make a lot of All-Star teams. Score a lot of points. No two cases are exactly the same. None of them are about empty statistics.

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The Miami Heat retired two-time NBA champion Chris Bosh's No 1 jersey in an emotional ceremony

The most important thing a Hall of Famer has to do is mean something, and Chris Bosh meant something to everyone who cared to take a look and a listen.

Heat raise Bosh's jersey to rafters
Heat raise Bosh's jersey to rafters

Two-time NBA champion honoured by former team

It's fitting that perhaps the two most important moments in Chris Bosh's career had nothing to do with any of his 17,189 career points.

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Relive the greatest moments from Chris Bosh's six-year tenure with the Miami Heat.

It's also fitting that his rebound and pass to Ray Allen for the game-tying three in the final seconds of Game 6 against the San Antonio Spurs, and then his block on Danny Green in overtime, effectively decided whether the Miami Heat were going to win back-to-back titles or go home empty-handed for the second time in three years.

Bosh was the difference between winning and losing that night, and so many other nights, because he did the little things. That's the player he chose to be.

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"From a standpoint of statistics he didn't reach the platforms of other players because in the prime of his career he decided to come here to the big three, win championships and focus on that more so than his individual stats," Dwyane Wade said.

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Looking back, it may have seemed like an obvious choice for Bosh to leave the Toronto Raptors, having just scored 24 points a game in his fifth All-Star season, to join LeBron James and Dwyane Wade in Miami.

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Why not, right? It was still a choice. Bosh chose to give up the mantle of being a No 1 option. He chose to take less money. He chose a role where he would have to figure out how to fit in with his new team-mates, not the other way around, and where it would be just as important that he could get a defensive stop than if he could hit a jumper.

To win more, he chose less for himself. For a time it brought only criticism, even for showing just how much he cared.

Dwyane Wade embraces Bosh during the Miami Heat glory days
Image: Dwyane Wade embraces Bosh during the Miami Heat glory days

It was extremely common in those days for Erik Spoelstra to refer to Bosh as the team's most important player. Where others saw his scoring and rebounding totals shrink, his coach saw the gear in the mechanism.

Want to run a hyper-aggressive defensive style that deflated opponent after opponent as turnovers bled into dunks? You needed Bosh's speed and athleticism. Want to maximise the rim-attacking abilities of James and Wade? You needed Bosh's intelligence and floor-spacing acumen. Want to win? You needed Bosh.

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"In the moments of truth, when you really needed him to be a superstar player, he would remind everybody that, 'Hey, I still have that kind of ability but I was sacrificing for the betterment of the team,'" Erik Spoelstra said.

As the Heat won appreciation for Bosh began to spread, though he never appeared to seek it out himself. Always willing to stand at his locker and extoll the virtues of others while patiently answering question after question, you would be hard pressed to design a more ideal team-mate for a group that often resembled more of a traveling phenomenon than a regular basketball team.

Chris Bosh's jersey is raised to the rafters in Miami
Image: Bosh's jersey is raised to the rafters in Miami

He's the exact sort of person, much less player, you want representing the league.

Maybe that convinces you, maybe it doesn't. Maybe you need to be sold, and that would be in some ways understandable only because Bosh's career was unfortunately cut short and he didn't get to rack up the counting statistics he otherwise would have.

But this isn't a case where the argument needs to be made that his resume would be unimpeachable had he been medically cleared to finish out a career with six or seven more seasons. His resume is already unimpeachable. He's getting in.

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Chris Bosh relives how he, Dwyane Wade and LeBron James came together to form Miami's title-winning Big Three.

"He should be a first-ballot Hall of Famer," Spoelstra said.

The simple stuff first. Bosh is an 11-time All-Star. You know how many 11-time All-Stars aren't either in the Hall of Fame already or headed for it once they retire? None. How many 10-time All-Stars aren't in? None. What about nine-timers? Eight-timers? None in the modern era.

You have to get all the way down to seven-time All-Stars to start finding a player or two who either hasn't been enshrined or has an argument against them doing so in the near future. Sure, it may be a popularity contest at times to get into the game, but Bosh, never the flashiest player, was only an All-Star starter once. That means 10 times NBA coaches looked around the league and selected him by hand. Those are a legitimate 11 selections.

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In fewer than 900 games Bosh posted 106 Win Shares (an amalgamation of all relevant box-score statistics). Only six players have done that since the three-point line was introduced, including Kevin Durant, James Harden and Stephen Curry. They're all going in. Larry Bird and Adrian Dantley already are.

Over a lengthy peak, Bosh posted nine-straight seasons with Win Shares per 48 minutes topping .150. The only non-Hall of Famers in that group are three-time All-Stars Detlef Schrempf and Larry Nance.

Over 10 years, Bosh's teams were always at least 4.6 points per 100 possessions better with him on the court than off.

Chris Bosh addresses the Miami fans in front of the two NBA titles he helped the team win
Image: Bosh addresses the Miami fans in front of the two NBA titles he helped the team win

There's no case for his numbers being empty calories. It matters, too, that he won Olympic Gold in 2008. It's the Basketball Hall of Fame, not just the NBA.

Of course, the most important section on his resume is going to be the back-to-back championships and four-consecutive trips to the Finals. For four years the Heat were a historically important team and Bosh was crucial to its success.

From Dennis Rodman to Joe Dumars, even further back to James Worthy and Dennis Johnson, major contributors (at the All-Star level) on back-to-back champs are Hall of Famers.

Chris Bosh celebrates a Heat title with Wade and LeBron James
Image: Bosh celebrates a Heat title with Wade and LeBron James

Nevermind that he also played a major role in setting the prototype for the modern big man, stretching his game our mid-career long before it became a league-wide trend all while shifting his minutes more and more to the center position.

He may not have been a Most Valuable Player. It took a little more thought and focus to truly appreciate his impact than it did for his team-mates, but for a few years that was our collective failing as purveyors of the sport, not his.

He was always important, and you can't tell the story of basketball between 2003 and 2016 without talking about Bosh.

This is not a matter of whether or not Chris Bosh is a Hall of Famer, merely of how long it takes him to get in.

"He's a Hall of Famer," Wade said. "There's no doubt about it."

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