Associated Press

SPRINGFIELD, Mass. – Grant Hill thinks his Hall of Fame classmate Ray Allen is being undersold if he’s only remembered as a three-point shooter.

“I remember Milwaukee Ray,” Hill said, recalling Allen’s first stop in the league from 1996-2003. “He was one of the greatest shooters of all time, but Ray would dunk on you. He would drive to the basket. I don’t think of him as (just) a shooter.”

A two-time NBA champion who predated — and set the stage for — the current proliferation of long-distance shooting, Allen was inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame on Friday night along with three of the league’s best point guards and a half-dozen other stars from eras before the three-pointer came to dominate the game.

Allen made 2,973 three-pointers in his career, three times leading the league in made threes with numbers that wouldn’t crack a recent top five. He broke Reggie Miller’s all-time mark in 2011 with the Celtics and also was part of Boston’s 2008 championship team.

“When I first got into the game, I was told not to shoot so many threes because it was settling (for a shot),” Allen said Thursday after the Hall of Fame Class of 2018 was presented with its honorary orange blazers.

“So I had to work on my mid-range game, and I attacked the basket quite a bit,” he said.

Joining Allen at Friday night’s induction ceremony were Hill, Steve Nash, former Milwaukee Bucks coach Jason Kidd, Maurice Cheeks; women’s stars Tina Thompson, Katie Smith and Ora Mae Washington; coach Lefty Driesell; ABA and NBA star Charlie Scott; longtime executives Rod Thorn and Rick Welts; and Croatian star Dino Radja.

Radja played four seasons for the Celtics but made his name in Croatia and the former Yugoslavia, winning an Olympic silver medal for each and three straight European League titles.

Nash played 19 years in the NBA, earning back-to-back MVP awards in 2005-’06. He is third on the league’s career assist list and holds the NBA record with a .904 career free throw percentage.

Kidd, who was unable to attend Thursday’s jacket ceremony because of illness, is No. 2 on the NBA’s all-time lists for steals and assists. A two-time Olympic gold medalist, he was also a 10-time all-star.

Hill won two NCAA titles at Duke, a gold medal at the 1996 Olympics and played 19 years in the NBA, where he was a three-time winner of the league’s Sportsmanship Award.

Now an assistant with the Oklahoma City Thunder, Cheeks has been involved with the NBA since 1978, making four all-star teams and winning the 1983 championship with the Sixers. When he retired as a player, he was fifth in league history in both assists and steals.

Smith, the New York Liberty coach, is the all-time leading scorer in women’s professional basketball history, scoring more than 7,000 points and winning four championships in the ABL and WNBA. Thompson won all four of her titles in the WNBA, where she was the first-ever draft pick; she also won two Olympic gold medals.

Driesell is the inventor of “Midnight Madness” and the only coach in NCAA history to win at least 100 games at four different schools.