Shaquille O’Neal

Name – Shaquille O’Neal

Date of Birth – March 6, 1972

Birth place – Newark, New Jersey, U.S

Source of wealth – Basketball player/ new business endeavors and a multiyear television deal with Warner Bros

Who Is Shaquille O’Neal? Shaquille O’Neal is one of the most dominant players in NBA history, helping his teams to win NBA Championships and Olympic gold. Following his 2011 retirement, O’Neal became an NBA analyst, working alongside the likes of Charles Barkley and Ernie Johnson.

Early Life Shaquille Rashaun O’Neal was born on March 6, 1972, in Newark, New Jersey. After graduating from Cole High School in San Antonio, Texas, he enrolled at Louisiana State University, and would go on to become one of the most dominant players in the NBA.

During his years at Louisiana State, O’Neal was named College Player of the Year (1991) and twice named a unanimous first team All-American (1991, 1992). He dropped out of college in 1992, after his junior year, to pursue a career in the NBA.

Professional Basketball and Stats In his rookie season with the Orlando Magic, O’Neal, also known as “Shaq,” finished in the Top 10 in scoring, rebounding, blocks and shooting percentage. A notoriously bad free-throw shooter, O’Neal focused on trying to get more of his points on the power slam, and hearty NBA centers quickly learned to try to foul O’Neal rather than give him an easy shot. O’Neal became the first player in NBA history to be named Player of the Week in his first week in the league.

In 1996, O’Neal signed the biggest contract in NBA history, seven years for $120 million with the Los Angeles Lakers. That same year, he helped the United States’ Dream Team win gold at the Olympic Games in Atlanta, Georgia.

By the end of the decade, O’Neal was a three-time member of the All-NBA Third Team (1994, 1996 and 1997) and a two-time member of the All-NBA Second Team (1995 and 1999), and had earned a place on the All-NBA First Team (1998). (After debuting with the league’s First Team in ’98, he would be selected to the First Team seven more times — every year from 2000 to 2006.) In 2000, O’Neal was named the NBA’s Most Valuable Player.

O’Neal to a three year, $88.5 million contract extension and the larger-than-life center helped deliver three consecutive world championships to the team (2000, 2001 and 2002). In 2004, however, following growing dismay with team management and friction with teammate Kobe Bryant, O’Neal was traded to the Miami Heat.

During the 2004-05 season, O’Neal averaged a double-double (22.9 points per game and 10.4 rebounds), and in 2006, he helped the Heat capture the NBA championship — the fourth championship win of his career. O’Neal also led the league in field goal percentage in both 2005 and 2006, and during the 2006-07 season, he reached a career milestone: scoring his 25,000th point.

Following the 2007-08 season — his fourth season with the Heat — O’Neal was traded to the Phoenix Suns. He would only play for one season with the Suns, but that didn’t stop him from earning acclaim: Highlights from 2008-09 include leading the league with a .609 FG percentage, and being named the NBA All-Star Game’s co-MVP in 2009. O’Neal then traveled to the Midwest, joining the Cleveland Cavaliers via a trade deal that cost the team $