Spending a day with Shaq is out of this world June 12, 2002 By Chris Bernucca SportsTicker Pro Basketball Editor EAST RUTHERFORD, New Jersey (Ticker) -- There are more than 1,000 media members at the NBA Finals, so imagine my surprise when Shaquille O'Neal picked me to spend a day with him and tell his life story. You can imagine the jealousy. ESPN's David Aldridge could be heard on his cell phone, yelling at the assignment desk in Bristol, Connecticut. Mike Monroe and Sam Smith were conspiring to throw me out of the Pro Basketball Writers Association. I thought I saw Jim Gray following me. O'Neal and I met after practice in Newark, a couple of miles down the New Jersey Turnpike from the Continental Airlines Arena, where his Los Angeles Lakers are about to win their third straight championship. Like many basketball writers, I was under the impression that this was the town where Shaq was born. But he set me straight. "I'm different. I'm not from this planet," he told me. "I was looking at my mother's book, trying to find baby pictures. "I didn't see any baby pictures. Then I saw a certificate that said I was found on a train." You might think that someone as big as O'Neal would have been a bully as a youngster. Not so. In fact, it was quite the opposite. As the case has been throughout his NBA career, O'Neal's size made him an obvious target for as long as he can remember. "I've been getting criticized ever since I was a newborn," he laments. "(They said), 'He's not gonna fit those Pampers, his boom boom is too big. You need some bigger Pampers.'" You also might think someone as popular as O'Neal would know all of the hot spots in New Jersey. Again, you would be wrong. "I have no idea. I don't know," he says. "You can go to Vivi's house, get some fried chicken. You could go see my cousin Brian, Ida-Ann, go see Grandpa." In case you were wondering, those are some of O'Neal's relatives. We met them driving around Newark in his custom-made SUV, with a stereo system so powerful it makes the streetlamps sway to the beat. A song comes on the radio, and O'Neal turns up the volume. "You know the song by Juvenile, 'Back That Ass Up'?" he asks. I am unfamiliar with it, so O'Neal explains. According to him, that song best describes his style of play. "I just like to back them up with the booty, juvenile style," he says. We drive past a basketball court and -- perhaps with my senses dulled from the numbing reverberation of the subwoofers in O'Neal's ride -- I challenge the big guy to a game of 1-on-1, first one to 11 points wins. He lets me have the ball first and swats my jump shot off my head and out of bounds. He backs me down 10 straight times for dunks. The rim looks like a pretzel. I am so black and blue, I look like a plum. "I have a boom-boom-boom game," he says. "I always go to the first boom. If you take that away, I hit you with the other boom. By that time, I put the big booty on you and you'll be under the basket and it's a dunk. Not too many people can withstand my boom boom." I admit to O'Neal that it was probably a bad idea to challenge him to a game. I'm ready to pack it in, but he quickly reminds me that he needs one more point to win and the game isn't over until it's over. He says that's something he learned from his college coach. "Coming from LSU, playing with crazy Dale Brown, down 15 (points), 20 seconds left, he's the type to come in the huddle, 'All we need is nine 3-pointers. We can do it! Let's go!'" O'Neal recalls. Spurred on by O'Neal's inspiring words, I give him the ball and dig in on defense. He backs me into the support pole and dunks again. The backboard comes crashing down, missing my head by inches. We head back to O'Neal's hotel room to get ready for what I assume will be a big night on the town. O'Neal is one win away from cementing his status as one of the game's true all-time greats, and everyone knows the Nets cannot stop him or the Lakers. Celebrating one night early couldn't hurt, right? Wrong. O'Neal heads for the bathroom, beginning his ritualistic preparation for what should be his last game of the season. "I take a cold shower, watch certain channels at night on the TV," he says. Boy, what a disappointment. The other night, O'Neal and Kobe Bryant went to Mickey Mantle's in midtown to watch the Lennox Lewis-Mike Tyson fight. I thought for sure we'd be heading to a ritzy restaurant or a nouveaux nightclub. Oh, well. With O'Neal and I both being family men and not big fans of hockey, I figure we're going to watch something like "Sponge Bob" or maybe a movie on the Disney Channel. O'Neal, however, has other ideas. "Before the game, I like to get excited about what I'm getting ready to do, so I watch certain channels," he explains. There's no explanation necessary; Asia Carrera is fine with me. She's certainly more exciting than the NBA Finals have been -- present company excepted, of course. That gets me wondering. Why would a man as rich and as powerful as O'Neal pick me to chronicle his daily routine? This is a man who once marketed a line of clothes called TWISM, an acronym for The World Is Mine." Why would he allow little ol' me into that world? "I get mad (and) I'm not allowed to say or do anything, because of how corporate I am," he says. "So I have to channel it in different ways. You guys are very illustrious and creative with your pens and I just like to prove you wrong every now and then. So once again, thank you for the lovely words of encouragement." No, Shaquille, thank you.
ha ha, i just read this article and was about to post a link to it... you beat me to it man! shaq + skinemax = finals mvp