Mike Montgomery, who developed Stanford into a national power and coached Cal to its first conference title in 50 years, has been voted into the 11th class of the National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame.

“It is a great honor to be recognized for a job well done over a lifetime of work,” Montgomery said. “I am really honored and pleased to be included among such a special group.”

Montgomery, 69, is joined in the 2016 induction class by DePaul’s Mark Aguirre, Kansas State’s Bob Boozer, Illinois State’s Doug Collins, La Salle’s Lionel Simmons, UCLA’s Jamaal Wilkes, Georgia’s Dominique Wilkins, and fellow coaching legend Hugh Durham.

Enshrinement ceremonies will take place on Friday, Nov. 18, at the Arvest Bank Theatre at the Midland in Kansas City.

Montgomery won 677 games as a college coach, directed Stanford to a Final Four appearance in 1998 and led Cal to its first conference title in 50 years in 2010. He recorded 31 winning seasons in 32 years as a coach and ranks third on the Pac-12 career victory list with 282 league victories.

In 2004, he received the John R. Wooden Legends of Coaching Lifetime Achievement Award.

Montgomery arrived at Stanford from Montana for the 1986-87 season and in his third year guided the Cardinal to its first NCAA tournament appearance in 47 years. His teams at Stanford won four conference titles and reached at least the second round of the NCAA tournament 10 straight years.

He left Stanford to coach the Golden State Warriors in 2004 after winning a school-record 393 games. By 2008-09 he was back coaching college ball at Cal, where he assembled the winningest six-year stretch in school history with 130 victories and four NCAA tournament appearances.

Cal’s 2009-10 squad won the conference title for the first time since Pete Newell’s final team in 1960.

A four-time conference coach of the year, Montgomery coached 43 all-Pac-12 players and helped develop eight first-round NBA draft picks.