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Shaquille O'Neal leaves Kareem Abdul-Jabbar out of his top 10 GOAT list

Shaquille O'Neal leaves Kareem Abdul-Jabbar out of his top 10 GOAT list


Netflix: Shaq reveals his top 10 greatest NBA players of all time 👀 Watch one of the all-time greats make his next play on Power Moves with Shaquille O'Neal premieres June 4.

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Promoting a documentary series streaming on Netflix, …

Promoting a documentary series streaming on Netflix, Power Moves with Shaquille O’Neal, Shaquille O’Neal went into revealing his all-time Top 10 list. Sharing his opinion on the best-ever NBA players, 53-year-old Shaq initially listed himself in tenth place, but quickly moved on to present his ten favorites. The turned-basketball analyst reserved first place for Michael Jordan. In addition, he did not name his partner in the brand new Netflix series, Allen Iverson. Shaq’s all-time Top 10: 1. Michael Jordan 2. Kobe Bryant 3. LeBron James 4. Magic Johnson 5. Bill Russell 6. Wilt Chamberlain 7. Larry Bird 8. Hakeem Olajuwon 9. Tim Duncan 10. Julius Erving

EuroHoops.net


Bill Cartwright: When I came to the league, uh, who are the guys that I admired? I'm playing against Wes Unseld. I'm playing against Dan Issel. Here's Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. Here's Jack Sikma. My second game I played against Julius Erving. And by the way, I blocked his shot. I couldn't believe I blocked his shot. So when I came to the league, those guys were my heroes. So now I come to Chicago, it's like what… People are like, "What was it like to play against Mike?" And I'm like, “He was a good young player." So to me, my heroes are the guys that I played and saw when I was a kid. Rest of you guys are just young kids. You guys are young kids. I couldn't be enamored by you young kids. Because I saw John Havlicek play, right? Bob Cousy. I met Bill Russell when I was in high school. So I was supposed to be impressed by these young guys? Get out of here. My heroes are behind me. 

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I ask about the recent losses inside his basketball family. Satch Sanders: “I don't answer calls when people start out with, 'Did you know? ... 'Did you know' is always gonna be followed up with, 'He died.'" He sighs twice. "Did any of the deaths really hit you differently?" I ask. "Chamberlain," he says quickly. "We always saw him as being so big and so strong." "What about Bill Russell?" Sanders shakes his head. "Russell was human," he says.

ESPN


Duane Rankin: "They can't guard anybody. They're going to have to find somebody to cover for LeBron and Luka. LeBron don't play defense anymore. Luka can't guard a chair. You're going to have to have Wilt, Kareem and Bill Russell back there blocking shots." Charles Barkley on Lakers needs. pic.x.com/CQjs9QaWeG

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Tracy Murray’s top five players of all time: ‘Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Magic Johnson, Larry Bird, Michael Jordan, Bill Russell'


Tracy Murray's top five players of all time: ‘Kareem is definitely one. He's the reason why I played. Cap, I love you man. He’s the reason why I went to UCLA, the reason why I picked up a basketball. When I was five years old I told my dad ‘I want to play basketball like Kareem Abdul-Jabbar’. So Cap, salute man. Buck (Magic Johnson), (Larry) Bird, bad motherf*cker. You know me, I'm rolling purple and gold, bro, I mean I grew up a Laker fan, I grew up in Coop’s Camp. I'm automatically purple and gold, Lakers, hate the Celtics. There's no other way, but you have to respect the hell out of Larry Bird, man what he did on the court was unbelievable. MJ (Michael Jordan) definitely. MJ, no question about MJ. No question, he's everybody's number one pretty much. The fifth one is always hard, but I'm going to say Bill Russell. He's a winner, the ultimate winner.

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Quite the epic journey, we are immediately set on the odyssey that is the history of the Celtics, a tall order in terms of sports documentarianism if ever there was one. "I think from that perspective, it's going to be different," she continued. "But I think also with this story, we knew that there were so many layers to it that went beyond just these iconic names and iconic moments, but that there was a real genuine connection between the Boston Celtics, the city of Boston, and American history, and really the story too of Black empowerment in America that comes through from Bill Russell to Jaylen Brown and that lineage." As we alluded to above, there's a lot to chew on with the history of the Celtics, and it appears this production team has not shied away from the challenge.

Celtics Wire


Natalie Nakase knew she had the opportunity of a lifetime. After years of serving as an assistant coach — in the G League, NBA, and ultimately the WNBA — she had finally achieved a longtime dream of leading her own team. At last, the 44-year-old former UCLA point guard would be a head coach, selected to lead the WNBA’s incoming expansion team, the Golden State Valkyries. Nakase, who was previously an assistant coach for the Los Angeles Clippers (2018-2020) and Las Vegas Aces (2022-24), has no shortage of experience on the bench. Under Clippers coach Ty Lue, she earned the respect of dozens of NBA players. Under the leadership of Becky Hammon, she won two WNBA championships alongside some of the best players in the sport. To this day, she credits Hammon for helping shape the WNBA into the league it is today — and for giving her a career-altering opportunity. Still, in the wake of her hiring in Golden State, there was someone else in the coaching world Nakase was eager to get to know: Celtics head coach Joe Mazzulla, who just a few months earlier had become the youngest head coach in the NBA to win a championship since Bill Russell did so in 1968 at age 34.

SB Nation


“My biggest thing was: how can I pick the brains of head coaches that win quickly?” Nakase told SB Nation in an exclusive interview. Nakase and Mazzulla had never met. But, the two shared a common background; both were undersized, tenacious guards on elite college basketball teams, Mazzulla at West Virginia (2006-2011) and Nakase at UCLA (1998-2003). Both later rose through the ranks in the G League. A close mutual friend also bound the two coaches: Celtics assistant coach Sam Cassell, who previously worked alongside Nakase on the Clippers.

SB Nation


From the moment Nakase met the Celtics’ head coach, his generosity struck her. “He was like, ‘What do you want to know? What questions do you have for me?’” Nakase recalled. “I’m like, ‘Are you for real? Like, aren’t you in-season?’ And he was like, ‘I got time.’” She was also struck by what she described as his “radical honesty” — whatever questions she had for him in those first few hours, he answered candidly, irrespective of how his answers might come off. “[He was] like, ‘this is me, this is who I am, and take it however you want,’” Nakase said. “And I think it’s kind of his mentality, right? Like, win-or-die.” Mazzulla provided blunt, honest answers to all of Nakase’s inquiries. As such, when she asked him about his playing career, he answered plainly: “I sucked.”

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