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NBA legend Shaquille O’Neal is one of the most dominant players to play in the NBA. He played in an era when most of the big men didn’t shoot 3-pointers. Many wouldn’t even attempt long 2 pointers. The centers were expected to post up and try to score when given the ball. With assists to cutting teammates now and then and shot-stopping in the defensive end.

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And O’Neal was phenomenal in everything. But one of the biggest flaws in Shaq’s game was his inability to hit the free throws consistently. Which made the opposition foul him constantly. 

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In his guest appearance for ‘The Pivot Podcast’, he was asked about his free throw issues. Channing was surprised how Shaq couldn’t make free throws being as tall as he is. He even joked about the size of a basketball in Shaq’s huge hands.

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And the Big Diesel said that his struggles with free throws helped him to be humble. O’Neal said, “I think it was a way to keep me humble. Imagine me being me and shooting like Steph Curry, I wouldn’t even be here right now. I would be so mo**er fu**ing arrogant.”

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“Think about that. That just kept me humble. It was something I knew I wasn’t really good at and I had to work and it made me vulnerable.”

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Shaquille O’Neal and ‘Hack-A-Shaq’

Centers back in the day didn’t play like the modern centers of today. And the Lakers legend was one of the best centers if not the best. His sheer strength and power coupled with his quickness for a big man made him impossible to deal with. And it was brutal for the players that had to defend him.

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Even though most centers at the time struggled with free throws, he suffered more. Because he was an easy target. Instead of allowing him the chance to post up and punish your defender and then dunk on him while breaking the backboard, teams chose to foul him early and live with the consequences. 

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Hence the term, ‘Hack-A-Shaq’. And the term is still used in basketball as a strategy where a team constantly fouls the opposing team’s worst free-throw shooter. 

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During his career, O’Neal averaged just 52.7% from the free-throw line in 1207 games. Even though he has made 1 of every 2 free throws, it isn’t considered good enough for a player of his stature. 

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Also, there was no other way to defend a prime Shaquille O’Neal, he had to be defended physically. And we can only wonder what Shaq could’ve achieved with a shooting touch like Stephen Curry.

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Written by

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Bagavathi Eswaran

1,520 Articles

Bagavathi Eswaran is a senior NBA writer at EssentiallySports, having a strong passion for the sport since the age of ten. As a former college player, Bagavathi has been following the NBA for more than a decade and has found his calling in writing about the sport. He has used his expertise in covering the NBA, as well as other arenas of the sport, to write more than 1400 articles at ES. Bagavathi's pieces on the increasingly dominant presence of European basketball and those following the journey of women-ballers are particularly noteworthy. Along with being a full-time writer, he is also a part of a group of young coaches groomed as trainers by Junior NBA. Bagavathi has trained players from schools and colleges, as well as underprivileged students who can attend the camps for free.

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Arunaditya Aima

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