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All-Time #NBArank: Shaq No. 9

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All-Time #NBArank has cracked the top 10 -- the cream of the crop.

To create All-Time #NBArank, we put together a ballot with the 150 greatest players ever. Then our ESPN expert panel voted on thousands of head-to-head matchups, with voting based on both peak performance and career value. The result is our all-time NBA Top 100, which concludes Wednesday.


All-Time #NBArank: No. 9

If you want to get involved in the discussion, #NBArank is the Twitter hashtag to use. You also can follow along @ESPNNBA and on Facebook.


Shaquille O'Neal

Position
Center

Teams
Orlando Magic (1992-96), Los Angeles Lakers (1996-2004), Miami Heat (2004-08), Phoenix Suns (2008-09), Cleveland Cavaliers (2009-10), Boston Celtics (2010-11)

Honors
MVP (1999-2000), three-time Finals MVP, 15-time All-Star, 14-time All-NBA selection, three-time All-D selection, Rookie of the Year (1992-93)

Championships
4 (2000, 2001, 2002, 2006)

Career stats
23.7 PPG, 10.9 RPG, 2.3 BPG, .582 FG%

Nickname(s)
Shaq, Diesel, The Big Aristotle, Most Dominant Ever, Superman

Did you know?
O'Neal and Michael Jordan are the only players in NBA history to win Finals MVP in three straight seasons. Shaq scored at least 30 points in every game of the 2000 and 2002 NBA Finals, and he is the only player in NBA history to score at least 30 points in every game of multiple NBA Finals. -- ESPN Stats & Info

Shaq's greatness? We can dig it

Most Dominant Ever?

Not quite.

Most consistently fun-loving?

On that score, Shaquille O'Neal runs pretty much unopposed in the NBA's pantheon of all-time great centers.

Shaq often proclaimed himself "The MDE" -- and so many other things. He introduced too many nicknames to count over the years because, frankly, who was going to tell the big man he couldn't? But it was all part of a package and a natural instinct to entertain that we'd never seen in pro basketball ... at least not from a 7-footer who had the ability to do the sort of damage we associate with the likes of Wilt and Kareem.

Maybe nothing rang more true with Shaquille Rashaun O'Neal than one of the first things I remember hearing him say upon his arrival in Los Angeles in the summer of 1996: "You've never met anyone like me."

Most certainly not.

Almost everything about Shaq and his game was outrageous: his sheer size, his rim-bending strength, his agility at that size and, of course, his capacity to deliver delicious drama for nearly a decade as the mischievous half of a roller-coaster hoops marriage to Kobe Bryant.

At his absolute peak, in Year 1 under Phil Jackson, Shaq came within one vote of becoming the first unanimous Most Valuable Player in league history. ‎Yet Shaq also had a knack, as larger than life as he was, to leave you wanting more.

What if he stayed in Orlando with Penny Hardaway or made it work with Kobe for longer? What if he kept himself in better shape? What if he feuded less, made more free throws and chased rebounds harder?

Yet for all of those justifiably nagging questions, O'Neal is the game's seventh all-time leading scorer and owns four championship rings. It's not the largest haul in history, but it's sufficiently Shaq-sized -- and plenty dominant -- to put him up there with the other legends of the game.

-- Marc Stein, ESPN Senior Writer

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