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Shaquille O'Neal's Viral Moment With Pacers' Mascot Has NBA Fans Buzzing

Shaquille O'Neal's Viral Moment With Pacers' Mascot Has NBA Fans Buzzing

Newsweek6 days ago

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources.
Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content.
Shaquille O'Neal is one of the best big men to ever play in the NBA and he has gone on to have a great broadcasting career as well.
He has become part of the "Inside the NBA" team on TNT with Ernie Johnson, Kenny "The Jet" Smith, and Charles Barkley. While the team is winding down their time together, there have been many great moments for fans to remember during the playoffs.
On Sunday night while attending the Indiana Pacers vs. New York Knicks matchup in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference Finals, O'Neal was involved in a viral moment with the Pacers' mascot.
Shaquille O'Neal looks on prior to a game between the Boston Celtics and Miami Heat at Kaseya Center on May 21, 2023 in Miami, Florida.
Shaquille O'Neal looks on prior to a game between the Boston Celtics and Miami Heat at Kaseya Center on May 21, 2023 in Miami, Florida.
Photo byBefore the game, while O'Neal was sitting in a seat next to the court, Indiana's mascot Boomer attempted to dunk on him.
Unfortunately for Boomer, he missed the dunk attempt and a once in a lifetime chance to post Shaq.
Read more: Pacers Legend Reveals Major Criticism for Tyrese Haliburton After Game 3 Loss
Fans have been buzzing about the video and getting a good laugh out of it.
"OH HIS HEAD," one fan wrote.
Another fan commented, "Shaq would have been crushed back in the day if Boomer was aloud to play."
"Boomer !! The best mascot in the NBA!!" a third fan said.
A fourth comment read, "In your face, Shaq!"
During the game that O'Neal was covering, the Pacers jumped out to an early lead. They were up by 20 at one point in the first half. At halftime, Indiana held a 13-point lead, but they were unable to keep that lead safe.
Entering the fourth quarter, the Pacers were up 10 points, but the Knicks weren't done. Behind Karl-Anthony Towns' huge fourth quarter, New York came storming back to take home a 106-100 lead and cut its series deficit to 2-1.
Read more: Knicks' Jalen Brunson Shares Strong 5-Word Reaction After Game 3 Win
Towns led the way in scoring for the Knicks with 24 points and 15 rebounds. Jalen Brunson chipped in with 23 points in the win. On Indiana's side, Tyrese Haliburton scored 20 points, Myles Turner scored 19, and Pascal Siakam chipped in 17.
Game 4 will be played on Tuesday night at 8 p.m. ET in Indianapolis. It will be a crucial game for both teams as they try to punch their ticket into the NBA Finals.
O'Neal and company will be there once again. With just a few broadcasts left for the "Inside the NBA" team, fans are sure to be watching closely to catch the next hilarious Shaq moment like the one above.
For more Indiana Pacers, New York Knicks and general NBA news, head over to Newsweek Sports.

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Doyel: Yes, the Pacers have superstars. And they have two more who don't actually play
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Indianapolis Star

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Doyel: Yes, the Pacers have superstars. And they have two more who don't actually play

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McConnell. These two guys were here before almost everyone on this roster. They were here before Haliburton and Siakam, in particular. And before Nembhard and Nesmith, and Mathurin and McConnell. The stars, the original stars, of the 2024-25 Indiana Pacers are the executive who put this team together, Kevin Pritchard, and the coach who will put that team on the court Thursday night against the Thunder, Rick Carlisle. How about we give them their flowers now, huh? Doyel from Game 6: Pacers on a 'magical ride.' Four more wins means first NBA title. Insider: Pacers' unconventional path back to NBA Finals 'a new blueprint for the league' This is the team of Pritchard's dreams, the team he has been trying to craft since he took over for Larry Bird as Pacers president in 2017. Pritchard is not your typical NBA executive, in part because he's not overseeing your typical NBA franchise. He doesn't have an unlimited budget, and even if he did, it wouldn't matter. History has shown that the very best of the very best – past, present and future MVP candidates – don't come here as free agents. And because players of that ability can dictate where they want to play, those guys don't arrive here in trades, either. Some franchises can money-whip a roster into shape, just put as many stars on the court as possible and see what happens next. That's been the story in Philadelphia and Los Angeles — Lakers and Clippers — and even in recent years, Golden State with the please-take-me additions of Kevin Durant and Jimmy Butler. Miami also has done it that way, with success. Brooklyn and Phoenix have tried it, without. Pritchard has always seen his ideal starting five not as one or two superstars — and whoever else can fit around the salary cap — but as five fingers forming a fist. 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But along the way Mathurin has noticeably — I mean, obviously — become more of a defensive presence, in particular working so hard on his occasional assignments on stars Donovan Mitchell of Cleveland and Jalen Brunson of the Knicks. What does high character mean? It means Andrew Nembhard, who showed during the 2024 Eastern Conference Finals against Boston just how productive he can be if given the chance — 21 ppg, with Haliburton injured — willingly going back to his supporting role when Haliburton returned. Nembhard averaged 10 ppg this season. What does high character mean? It means center Myles Turner sharing minutes with Domantas Sabonis for years, never making a peep, never asking out. And when it was time to decide which center to keep, Pritchard let Sabonis go to Sacramento at the 2022 trade deadline — knowing the Pacers needed a point guard more than a ball-dominant post player, and knowing Turner would excel in a supporting role to the point guard Pritchard acquired from the Kings: Tyrese Haliburton. What does high character mean? It means, and it starts, with Haliburton playing a joyful style that insists everyone on the floor eats — often before he does, to his detriment. Haliburton, who averaged 6.3 assists per game in his 1½ season with Sacramento, has averaged 10.1 apg in 3½ seasons with the Pacers. Haliburton, a really nice Robin to De'Aaron Fox's Batman in Sacramento, has come to the Pacers and proved to be the better of the two: the All-NBA player, the U.S. Olympian, the author of postseason heroics. 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You may not know much about the Pacers and Thunder, but you'll enjoy the show they put on in the NBA Finals

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