Hakeem Olajuwon
Championship Peak (1993-95) · 1993–1995
Olajuwon's elite Defense (96) and elite Inside Scoring (92) define this era.
Trophy Case
1994, 1995
Back-to-back while Jordan was retired — first Houston titles ever
1994, 1995
Averaged 33/10 in 1994, 33/10 in 1995 — back-to-back dominance
1994
Also won DPOY the same year — only player to win both in one season
1993, 1994
1994: also won MVP and led Houston to the title — historic triple crown
1985, 1986, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1992, 1993, 1994, 1996, 1997
12 selections — the most complete center of his era
1987, 1988, 1989, 1993, 1994, 1997
6 selections — elite two-way center across two decades
1990, 1991, 1993
3 titles — the greatest shot-blocker in NBA history
The Story
The Dream Shake
Hakeem Olajuwon's footwork was so absurd that NBA players flew to Houston every summer just to train with him. Kobe, LeBron, Dwight — they all made the pilgrimage. His "Dream Shake" wasn't one move. It was a series of fakes layered on fakes, and by the time you figured out which one was real, the ball was already through the net. In the 1994 and 1995 playoffs, he led the Rockets to back-to-back titles as the only star — no superteam, no second banana. Just Hakeem and a bunch of solid role players dismantling everyone.
The Only One Who Did It Alone
Every other champion of the modern era had a co-star. Shaq had Kobe. Jordan had Pippen. Duncan had Robinson then Ginobili and Parker. Hakeem in 1994? He had Vernon Maxwell and Sam Cassell. He won Finals MVP both years. He had a legendary playoff run in 1995 where he beat Stockton/Malone, Barkley/KJ, Robinson, and then swept Shaq's Magic. Four Hall of Famers eliminated in a single postseason. Nobody talks about it enough.
The Gentleman Giant
Off the court, Hakeem was known for his quiet dignity and deep Islamic faith. He played multiple Ramadan seasons while fasting during games — and somehow still dominated. He became a U.S. citizen in 1993 and represented Nigeria in the 1996 Olympics. After retirement, he became one of the most successful real estate investors in Houston, with a portfolio reportedly worth hundreds of millions.
Signature Moments
The Dream Shake — Destroying Robinson
In the 1995 Western Conference Finals, Hakeem destroyed David Robinson — the reigning MVP — with the Dream Shake so thoroughly that Robinson looked helpless. Hakeem averaged 35.3 points on 56% shooting. Robinson had no answer. None.
Robinson won MVP that season. Hakeem took it personally and put on the greatest individual center performance in playoff history.
Back-to-Back Championships Without Jordan
Hakeem won two straight championships while Jordan was retired — and beat Ewing, Barkley, Robinson, and Shaq along the way. The 1995 Rockets were a 6-seed and swept the 60-win Orlando Magic in the Finals. Hakeem was Finals MVP both years.
People say he only won because Jordan was gone. He beat every other great center of his era. The disrespect fuels the legend.
The 1994 Finals — Clutch City
The Rockets were down 3-2 in the Finals. Hakeem scored 25 in Game 6 and 25 in Game 7, including the game-sealing block on John Starks. Houston won its first championship. The city's nickname became "Clutch City" — because of Hakeem.
He blocked the shot that would have given the Knicks the title. Then Houston threw the biggest party Texas had ever seen.
Quadruple-Double
Hakeem recorded 18 points, 16 rebounds, 11 blocks, and 10 assists — a quadruple-double. Only four players in NBA history have ever done it. Hakeem did it with blocks, the hardest stat to accumulate.
A quadruple-double with blocks. That's not a stat line — it's a physics experiment.
Record-Breaking Performances
The games and seasons that rewrote history
Quadruple-Double vs Milwaukee Bucks
A quadruple-double requires elite production in four statistical categories in a single game. Most players never lead the league in even one of those categories. Hakeem dominated all four in 48 minutes.
One of only four officially recorded quadruple-doubles in NBA history. Hakeem is the only center to achieve it.
Hakeem was 27 and entering his prime. He wouldn't win his championships for another four years, but games like this showed the NBA he was the most complete player alive.
Career Numbers
Blocks Per Game
All-time blocks leader
3.1
Career Blocks
#1 all-time
3,830
Career Points
11th all-time
26,946
Career Steals
Only player top-10 in blocks AND steals
2,162
Points Per Game
Career average across 1238 games
21.8
Rebounds Per Game
11.1
Steals Per Game
Most steals ever by a center
1.7
Season Stats · Championship Peak (1993-95)
Engine Attributes
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