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Hakeem the Dream
Full Name: Hakeem
Abdul Olajuwon
Born: 1/21/63 in Lagos, Nigeria
Height: 7-0; Weight: 255 lbs.
High School: Muslim Teachers College (Lagos, Nigeria)
College: Houston
Drafted by: Houston Rockets (1984)
Transactions: Traded to Toronto, 8/2/01
During his 18-year
career, Nigeria-born Hakeem Olajuwon staked his claim as one of the
greatest players in NBA history. Long considered a physical marvel since
his days at the University of Houston, his aesthetic and productive play
-- highlighted by his Houston Rockets’ back-to-back NBA titles -- earned
him a place among the game’s best.
In 1993-94 he had a
storybook season, becoming the first player to be named NBA MVP, NBA
Defensive Player of the Year and NBA Finals MVP in the same season. The
following season he rallied the Rockets from a sixth seed in the playoffs
to their second straight NBA crown, making Houston the fifth NBA franchise
ever to win back-to-back titles.
Olajuwon was the third of
six children and acquired the basic values that pushed him to succeed from
his parents, who were middle-class and owned a cement business in Lagos,
Nigeria.
"They taught us to be
honest, work hard, respect our elders, believe in ourselves," the NBA
great has said.
Olajuwon, which
translates into “always being on top,” began playing basketball at the
late age of 15. Olajuwon's high school, the Muslim Teachers College, was
an entry in the basketball tournament at the All-Nigeria Teachers Sports
Festival in Sokoto -- but Olajuwon was on the handball team. A fellow
student approached the coach and asked if Olajuwon could play for the
team. Permission was granted and a basketball superstar was born.
Two years later he
enrolled at the University of Houston under the name of Akeem Abdul
Olajuwon. He dropped references to "Abdul" prior to entering the NBA and
officially adopted "Hakeem" on March 9, 1991. To paraphrase Shakespeare; a
great basketball player by any other name is still a great basketball
player.
Although his athletic
career began as a soccer goalkeeper and handball player, which ultimately
helped give him the footwork and agility to balance his overpowering
strength and size in basketball, he quickly became a dominating player at
Houston. He played three seasons at Houston and help push the Cougars into
the Final Four each year.
In 1982, Olajuwon and
Clyde Drexler were on a Houston squad that made it to the NCAA
semifinals but lost 68-63 to the North Carolina Tar Heels, led by
James Worthy and Michael Jordan. The next year in the semifinals, the
Cougars -- by this time known as "Phi Slamma Jamma" for their
above-the-rim play -- soared above an equally athletic Louisville squad
94-81 in perhaps the most exciting end-to-end, high-flying act the NCAA
Final Four has ever seen. However, the Cougars were upset 54-52 in a
thrilling championship game on a shot at the buzzer by North Carolina
State, an overwhelming underdog.
In 1983-84, Olajuwon
averaged 16.8 points and led the NCAA in rebounding (13.5 rpg), blocked
shots (5.6 per game) and field-goal percentage (.675). He was a First Team
All-America selection that season, but
Patrick Ewing and the Georgetown Hoyas defeated Olajuwon's Cougars
84-75 in the championship game.
After the Rockets won a
coin flip with the Portland Trail Blazers for the first pick in the 1984
NBA Draft -- one year before the institution of the Draft Lottery --
Houston selected Olajuwon. Although the talented Jordan was also available
(he would be picked third by the Chicago Bulls), almost all in the
basketball world thought Olujawon was the correct selection at No. 1.
One year earlier, the
Rockets won a coin flip with the Indiana Pacers, allowing the franchise to
select the University of Virginia's Ralph Sampson. Thus, the fickle flips
of a coin created the “Twin Towers” of 7-0 Olajuwon and 7-4 Sampson -- two
agile giants.
In his rookie year,
Olajuwon averaged 20.6 points and 11.9 rebounds while shooting .538 from
the field and finished second to Jordan in Rookie of the Year balloting.
The Rockets went from a 29-53 record before Olajuwon’s arrival to a 48-34
mark, but they were eliminated in five games by the Utah Jazz in the first
round of the 1985 NBA Playoffs.
Olajuwon ranked fourth in
the league in rebounding and second in blocked shots with 2.68 per game.
He played in the 1985 NBA All-Star Game and was named to the NBA
All-Rookie Team and the NBA All-Defensive Second Team. He and Sampson
became the first teammates since
Wilt Chamberlain and
Elgin Baylor in 1970 to both average better than 20 points and 10
rebounds.
The next year, Olajuwon
and Sampson powered the Rockets into the 1986 NBA Finals. On the way
there, they defeated the reigning champion Los Angeles Lakers in a
five-game Western Conference Finals. In the series' final three games,
Olajuwon scored 40, 35 and 30 points to lead the Rockets. The Boston
Celtics, champs in 1981 and 1984, had a formidable front line of
Larry Bird,
Kevin McHale and
Robert Parish and defeated the Rockets in six games.
In 1986-87, Sampson began
to suffer from injuries and the following season he was traded to the
Golden State Warriors. Olajuwon's production simply increased as he
developed into one of the game’s top big men. Olajuwon led the Rockets in
13 statistical categories, including scoring, rebounding, steals and
blocked shots. He began a string of selections to the All-NBA First Team
(1987 to 1989) and NBA All-Defensive First Team (1987, 1988 and 1990), and
was the starting center for the Western Conference All-Stars four years in
a row (1987-90).
Olajuwon regularly placed
among the league leaders in scoring, rebounding, blocked shots and steals.
He won rebounding titles in 1989 and 1990, averaging 13.5 and 14.0 boards,
respectively. And in 1989 he became the first player to finish among the
league’s top 10 in scoring, rebounding, steals and blocked shots for two
straight seasons. That same year against the Milwaukee Bucks, Olajuwon had
18 points, 16 rebounds, 11 blocks and 10 assists, recording the rare
quadruple-double. He also led the NBA in blocked shots in 1989-90 with
4.59 per game and in 1990-91 at 3.95 per contest.
During this run, Olajuwon
came back from two serious injuries. He took an elbow in the eye from the
Chicago Bulls’ Bill Cartwright in the middle of the 1990-91 season,
suffering a blowout fracture of the bones that surround the eyeball and
forcing him to miss the Rockets’ next 25 games. In 1991-92, he missed
seven contests early in the season after an episode of atrial fibrillation
(an irregular heartbeat).
Despite Olajuwon’s play,
the Rockets had settled into mediocrity since the team’s trip to the NBA
Finals in 1986 -- Houston didn’t win a playoff series from 1988 through
1992. But beginning in 1992-93, midway through his career, Olajuwon got
even better, taking himself and the Rockets to new levels of success.
Because of stagnated
contract negotiations, many thought he had played his last game for
Houston at the end of the 1991-92 campaign. But on a flight to Japan,
where the Rockets played the first two games of the 1992-93 season against
the Seattle SuperSonics, Olajuwon and Houston owner Charlie Thomas
smoothed out their differences. In the next three seasons he would average
26.1 points, 27.3 points and 27.8 points, respectively.
Whether the contract
squabbles had affected Olajuwon’s 1991-92 performance may never be known,
but that year he failed to make an All-NBA Team or an NBA All-Defensive
Team for the first time in his career. And he certainly experienced a
resurgence in 1992-93. Coach Rudy Tomjanovich began his first full season
with the Rockets, preaching defense and imploring the team to feed off of
Olajuwon’s energy.
The eight-year veteran,
who later in the season became a naturalized United States citizen on
April 2, 1993, was simply spectacular throughout the year. He averaged
26.1 points, 13.0 rebounds and 4.17 blocks, which established him as the
league-leader in blocked shots for the third time in four seasons. More
importantly, he led a Rockets team that had finished 42-40 the previous
year to a 55-27 mark and the Midwest Division championship.
At season’s end, Olajuwon
finished second to
Charles Barkley in the voting for the NBA Most Valuable Player award.
He was also named NBA Defensive Player of the Year for the first time,
while reclaiming spots on the All-NBA First Team and the NBA All-Defensive
First Team.
Akin to an athlete who
shared his faith of Islam, Muhammad Ali, who devised the strategy of the
rope-a-dope later in is career, Olajuwon introduced a new line of spins,
fadeaway shots and jumpers, and he became virtually unstoppable on
offense. The man called "Hakeem the Dream" had now developed a set of
patented moves with either his back to the basket or facing opponents, and
he abused defenders with numerous fakes, all of which became known as the
"Dream Shake."
During the 1995
postseason run culminating in Houston's second NBA championship, the
Rockets defeated the San Antonio Spurs and the Orlando Magic, two teams
with great centers who were left bewildered by Olajuwon's moves.
In a Life magazine
story, San Antonio's David Robinson seemed perplexed. "Solve Hakeem?" said
Robinson. "You don't solve Hakeem."
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Hakeem the Dream unstoppable
even by strong man Shaq |
Orlando's Shaquille
O'Neal felt the same way after going down in a Finals sweep . "He's got
about five moves, then four countermoves," said a stunned O'Neal. " That
gives him 20 moves."
This new Olajuwon had
evolved after the dispute with management prompted him to reflect and then
rededicate himself. His maturation as a player and in his faith carried
onto the floor as a team leader, offensive powerhouse and defensive
stalwart.
The transformation was
apparent when the Rockets advanced to the 1993 Western Conference
Semifinals. However, the team lost a tough Game 7, 103-100 in overtime,
against a Seattle SupeSonics team led by Gary Payton and a young,
explosive Shawn Kemp.
But in 1993-94, Olajuwon
attained the pinnacle of achievement when he won both the league and NBA
Finals MVP awards while leading Houston to its first-ever NBA crown.
Following a brilliant regular season, the Houston center also earned his
second straight NBA Defensive Player of the Year Award.
The Rockets won the title
after a grueling seven-game defeat of the Patrick Ewing-led New York
Knicks. The center's defensive prowess put an end to the Knicks' attempt
to win the series in Game 6, when he blocked John Starks' potential
game-tying three-point shot at the end of the game. The 10-year veteran
was simply brilliant in the Finals, contributing 29.1 points, 9.1 rebounds
and 3.86 blocks per game.
In 1994-95, Olajuwon had
a career-best 27.8 ppg along with 10.8 rpg. Despite Olajuwon’s impressive
performance, the league’s Most Valuable Player Award went to Robinson
after he led the Spurs to the NBA’s best record. Olajuwon also became the
Rockets’ all-time leading scorer when he passed Calvin Murphy early in the
season. In February, Olajuwon was reunited with college teammate Drexler,
who came over from the Portland Trail Blazers in a trade for forward Otis
Thorpe.
While trying to adjust to
Drexler’s presence, the Rockets closed out the season in bumpy fashion and
entered the playoffs seeded sixth in the Western Conference. But Drexler
was terrific in the playoffs and Olajuwon averaged 33.0 points on .531
shooting from the field, 10.3 rebounds, 4.5 assists, 1.2 steals and 2.81
blocks per game in the postseason as Houston captured its second
consecutive title. Matched against the Spurs in the Western Conference
Finals, Olajuwon averaged 35.3 points to Robinson’s 25.5.
In the NBA Finals,
Houston met the Magic and the league’s great young center, O’Neal. The two
big men had similar numbers as Olajuwon averaged 32.8 points, 11.5
rebounds and 5.5 assists to O’Neal’s 28.0 points, 12.5 rebounds and 6.3
assists. But the Rockets swept the series, making Houston the fifth NBA
franchise to win back-to-back titles. For his spectacular play, Olajuwon
was awarded his second consecutive NBA Finals MVP award.
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Praying one of the five prayers compulsory for Muslims during the day,
thanking the God Almighty. |
Olajuwon believes that
his religious faith supported his drive to a great career. During an NBA
season he observes Islam's Ramadan, which includes periods of fasting. He
would awaken before dawn to eat precisely seven dates -- the traditional
Muslim fast-breaking food -- and to drink a gallon of water. He would
follow with a prayer for strength and have no food or liquid until sunset.
When he played an
afternoon game, he would pant for water -- but did not drink a drop.
Still, he would say, “I find myself full of energy, explosive. And when I
break the fast at sunset, the taste of water is so precious.”
This transcendent
dedication and performance earned him mention among the greatest winners
in recent history, including ,Kareem
Abdul Jabber ,Jordan, Bird,
Magic Johnson and
Isiah Thomas.
After winning the
championships, Olajuwon maintained his productive play over the next two
seasons. However, the team was swept by the Sonics in the 1996 conference
semifinals. And even with the addition of Barkley before the 1996-97
season, which reinvigorated the Rockets, the team lost in six games to the
Jazz in the Western Conference Finals.
Beginning in the 1997-98
season, Olajuwon began to miss time due to injuries and played just 47
games that year. He returned to play close to a full schedule during the
lockout season of 1998-99. However, his production was slipping and he
played just two more years in Houston, averaging less than 12.0 ppg and
7.5 rpg. He retired after playing one season for the Toronto Raptors in
2001-02, interrupting 20 years, including his college career, of playing
in the city of Houston.
His impact in the city,
however, did not go unrecognized. The Rockets' all-time leader at the time
of his retirement in a host of categories, including points, rebounds,
steals, and blocked shots had his jersey No. 34 retired on Nov. 9, 2002.
At the ceremony, it was announced that a life-sized statue of Olajuwon
would be on display at the Rockets' new downtown arena, scheduled to open
for the 2003-04 season.
|
G |
FG% |
3PFG% |
FT% |
Rebs |
RPG |
Asts |
APG |
Stls |
Blks |
Pts |
PPG |
|
1,238 |
.512 |
.202 |
.712 |
13,748 |
11.10 |
3,058 |
2.5 |
2,162 |
3,830 |
26,946 |
21.8 |
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