Shaquille O’Neal is one of the most hilarious guys in the NBA world. Now an analyst for NBA on TNT, he has his own podcast called ‘The Big Podcast by SHAQ’. He recently collaborated with ‘The Pivot Podcast’ and shared some of his life experiences.
While Shaq isn’t someone who shies away from sharing most details, questions about physical relationships are bound to make anyone uncomfortable.
And during the podcast, he was asked about the challenges he has faced with physical relationships owing to his size.
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The Big Diesel tried to play it down at first. But the crew was persistent and kept asking funny questions. And Shaq hilariously used the help of geometry to explain some intricate information.
And the fans are having a field day watching the Lakers legend explaining things about his physical relationships.
One fan got the answer to a long-standing question, “What’s hilarious is that this clip has the most views out of the entire podcast because EVERYONE was wondering the same exact thing lmao thank you Channing for getting answers to questions all shaq fans have been wondering for our entire career of being a fan”.
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Shaquille O’Neal’s relationships
Shaquille O’Neal and Shaunie Nelson married in December 2002. The couple has four children. Their first child, Shareef, was born on January 11, 2000. Then Amirah was born on November 13, 2001. Their third Shaqir was born on April 19, 2003. And the fourth child, Me’arah, was born on May 1, 2006. Shaunie also has one son from a previous relationship, Myles. O’Neal has a daughter named Taahirah born on July 19, 1996, from a previous relationship with his ex-girlfriend Arnetta Yardbourgh.
And, after 5 years of marriage, they separated and reconciled shortly after. But it didn’t last long as Shaunie filed for divorce in 2009 and got the divorce in 2011.
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Shareef O’Neal attended Crossroads School in Santa Monica, California. As a senior forward, he was ranked among the top high school basketball players in his class. He was recruited to play for the UCLA Bruins. But UCLA announced that he would miss the 2018–19 season due to health reasons.
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The UCLA medical staff diagnosed him with a heart condition and he underwent surgery in December. Shareef made his UCLA debut in the 2019–20 season opener, playing six minutes without scoring against Long Beach State.
On January 22, Shareef announced that he was leaving UCLA. Then, on February 14, 2020, he announced he was transferring to Louisiana State University, where his father played college basketball.