
Imago
Image via Facebook/ @Dime on Uprozz

Imago
Image via Facebook/ @Dime on Uprozz
Charles Barkley had spent the week defending Inside the NBA’s lack of X-and-O breakdowns, arguing the show isn’t meant to be a film room. But after the New York Knicks’ 121-108 win on Saturday, the broadcast delivered its own unintended proof of concept: just not in the way he meant.
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In a game where New York never trailed at Rocket Arena and shot a blistering 55.8% from the field, the conversation could have gone anywhere: spacing, matchups, the Knicks’ offensive rhythm. Instead, when OG Anunoby sat down after his efficient 21-point outing (6 of 10 shooting, 3 of 4 from deep, plus 7 rebounds and 4 assists), Barkley veered in a completely different direction.
“OG, can I ask you a question?” Chuck began. “What is your real name?”
Anunoby laughed in disbelief at a question that felt more like a first introduction than a postgame interview. His full name has been cemented in league records and broadcast graphics alike.
OG still replied calmly, “My real name is Ogugua.”
Straight away, Barkley attempted to repeat it back but mispronounced it as “Ogug-wa”. There is a subtle difference that he didn’t notice, but Anunoby knew it was wrong. That’s why he said, “You’re not saying it right, though.”
But the NBA Hall of Famer took offense to this and said something that caught everyone off guard.
Barkley said, “You’re not saying it right? If you don’t say it right, we can’t say it right!”
So, the rest of the crew had to chime in and, in unison, said to Chuck, “No, you’re not saying it right!” And once again, OG was puzzled because Chuck claimed he could not say his name right.
“No, I am saying it right. What?” Anunoby replied.
Kenny Smith then entered the conversation, asking, “Could you say it one more time? Not even slowly. Just one more time.” And yes, OG repeated his name, and again the panel took a shot at answering it, but to no avail.
The host of the show, Ernie Johnson, who always steers the ship in the right direction, came to the rescue. EJ put a pin in those awkward conversations.
Charles Barkley: “OG, can I ask you a question? What is your real name?”
😭😭😭 (h/t @ohnohedidnt24) pic.twitter.com/ouZndXoVzO
— Legion Hoops (@LegionHoops) May 24, 2026
“By any name, he’s shooting 59% this postseason and 51% from deep, and the Knicks are a game away from the NBA Finals. OG Anunoby, joining us. Thanks, Charles, for punctuating that interview with that question.”
Barkley was still defending himself.
“That’s a great question, Ernie.” And the Sixers legend called it a great question because of his previous habit of getting names wrong.
Last season, Barkley’s frustration with pronouncing the name right was visible on the broadcast. He guessed “Mickeil Anderson-Alexander” and “Mikal Alexander” before asking, “Is his real name Nickeil? Boy, somebody just made up some stuff again. They named him after a coin; they just spelled it wrong.”
Chuck’s struggles with pronouncing Jonas Valanciunas had also turned into box office comedy over the years. While Barkley eventually got the Lithuanian giant’s name correct, here’s how he pronounced it the first time in 2014: “Valsu-enu-wild-sauce.”
It is moments like these that lead some basketball viewers to question the credibility of Inside the NBA as a premier program on live television. For years, Barkley stayed mum on the matter, but finally took the liberty to address why he, Shaq, and the boys don’t focus on the game as much.
Charles Barkley defends the lack of basketball analysis
For a show that has won 21 Sports Emmys, it still gets a lot of flak. Mostly because the Inside the NBA crew continues to mix humor into their basketball analysis. On the SI Media podcast, Charles Barkley explained to host Jimmy Traina why, from his point of view, the viewers don’t watch them for detailed X-and-O analysis, but for entertainment.
“We want people to have fun,” Chuck said. “We’re trying to entertain people. We’re on television from 7 to 2 in the damn morning. How many people actually know enough about basketball for us to X-and-O them? We try to split it up. We hope we have a great game, but we have an obligation to entertain the people, too. Do people really want to see us four dummies sit there and talk about P&Rs, blitzes, over/under, and things like that? I want people to have fun watching basketball. Period.”
They do dwell on some analysis, but never deep dive into it. Barkley remains one of the most influential voices in broadcasting and speaks on political and cultural matters whenever it is important. But he also knows how to mix it up. Recently, he was on air talking about Max Strus’ attractiveness. That’s the classic Inside the NBA analysis that one will not find on any other network.
Written by
Edited by

Tanay Sahai
