About This Quiz
The NBA center is vanishing right before our eyes. There was a time when the center was the biggest, baddest, best and most dominant player on the court. It was commonplace for Wilt Chamberlain to average 50 points a game for an entire season. He once grabbed 55 rebounds in a game and scored 100 points in a game, and averaged more than 22 rebounds per game for his entire career.Â
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar was so powerful that the NCAA outlawed dunking. Kareem invented the skyhook shot in response, and it's been called the most unstoppable move in basketball history. Shaq was so supreme he inspired a new NBA tactic called "Hack-a-Shaq." The concept was simple: If Shaq caught the ball underneath the basket, the other team would hack him. If he didn't get hacked, it was a guaranteed two points.Â
Bill Russell has 11 rings and just 10 fingers to put them on. Nobody has more championships than him.
But all that dominance happened so long ago. Wilt and Kareem would be the slowest players on the court today. Shaq only made one three-pointer in his entire career, and today's game is dominated by three-pointers. Bill Russell dominated, but he was only 6'8''. That's the size of a point guard today. Today's centers don't look anything like yesterday's, but they're still centers. Can you name the franchise if we list three of its greatest centers?
Shaq has many nicknames, but one of the most popular is "Superman," and he even has a Superman tattoo on his arm. By 2008, Dwight Howard began referring to himself as Superman, and the two superstars publicly started disliking each other. Also on the team, Vucevic became an all-star in 2019.
Shaq played for six NBA teams, including Orlando and Miami. Shaq and Alonzo won rings with the Heat in 2006 alongside Dwyane Wade. Bosh won two rings with Miami alongside Dwyane Wade and LeBron James. However, the superstar trio also lost two championships.
The Houston Rockets boast some of the greatest centers in NBA history and have chosen many centers with the number one pick in the draft. Yao Ming is the most famous Chinese basketball player in the world and one of the tallest to ever play.
Advertisement
Willis Reed played his entire NBA career with the New York Knicks and led the franchise to its only two NBA championships in 1970 and 1973. Patrick Ewing and Charles Oakley ran into Michael Jordan and the Bulls in the '90s and were never able to win a ring.
Pau Gasol played for the Grizzlies between 2001 and 2008, and his brother Marc joined the team in 2008. Pau won his first ring with the Lakers in 2009, and Marc won his first in Toronto in 2019. Shareef Abdur-Rahim played for the franchise when it was still in Vancouver.
The Celtics have the most NBA championship titles and are loaded at every position. Even Shaq and Bill Walton played center for the franchise at different points in time. Garnett and Perkins helped lead the team to a championship in 2008, the team's first in two decades.
Advertisement
Tim Duncan is listed alongside Shaq as the greatest center of that generation. He led the San Antonio Spurs to five championships and was named NBA MVP twice. David Robinson recorded the league's most recent quadruple-double back in 1994.
Jack Sikma helped lead the franchise to its first and only NBA championship in 1979. Michael Cage led the league in rebounds his first season in Seattle, and Steven Adams became a key piece of the team when it moved to Oklahoma City and became the Thunder.
The Phoenix Suns have never won an NBA Championship but won back-to-back-to-back division titles from 2005 to 2007 behind strong play from Amar'e Stoudemire. Alvan Adams played his entire career with the franchise and won several awards.
Advertisement
The Trail Blazers won the team's only NBA championship in 1977 behind strong play from MVP Bill Walton. Arvydas Sabonis and LaMarcus Aldridge put up great numbers for the franchise over several seasons, but they never got the help needed to win a championship.
The New Orleans Pelicans are the NBA's newest franchise and haven't had much time to establish greatness, but they did draft Anthony Davis in 2012. David West is naturally a power forward, but during his breakout year in 2005-06, he spent a lot of time playing center.
Before Kevin Love helped LeBron win Cleveland's first championship in franchise history, he was an all-star center for the Minnesota Timberwolves. Karl-Anthony Towns is the team's best center in history.
Advertisement
Bob Lanier played on the Pistons in the '70s and Mahorn joined the team in the '80s, when they were known as the "Bad Boys." Mahorn was known as one of the baddest players on the team, but Rasheed Wallace holds the franchise record for technical fouls with 317.
Karl Malone is the best big man in Utah Jazz history, but he played at power forward. Rudy Gobert is a throwback to NBA centers of the 1990s. Today he has the longest wingspan in the league and stands more than seven feet tall.
Brad Daugherty was the best center in Cavaliers' history until LeBron James came along and gave the team hope. Anderson Varejao and Tristan Thompson started the championship season with Cavaliers, but Varejao was eventually sent to Warriors and faced his old team in the finals.
Advertisement
Kareem is regularly considered the best center of all time, and he was drafted number one overall by the Milwaukee Bucks in 1969. He led the franchise to its first and only NBA Championship in 1971, winning the NBA MVP and Finals MVP awards that year. He also led the league in scoring that season.
Shaw Bradley stood 7'6'' and is one of the tallest NBA players ever. He wasn't the greatest player on the court, but he did lead the league in blocks one season. Tyson Chandler helped lead the Mavs to a championship in 2011 against the Miami Heat.
Sam Perkins helped lead the UNC Tar Heels to an NCAA championship alongside Michael Jordan in 1982. Perkins bested legendary Georgetown center Patrick Ewing in that game. Pau Gasol won two rings with Kobe and George Mikan is one of the greatest basketball players ever.
Advertisement
Clint Capela has a long way to go to catch Malone and Hayes, but he's well on his way. Capela began his career in the D-League and worked his way up to a five-year contract worth $90 million in 2018. Legendary centers Olajuwon, Mutombo, Malone, Hayes, Ming and Sampson all played for the Rockets.
Rik Smits paved the way for today's centers. The 7'4'' Dutchman was known for spreading the floor on offense while still being one of the league's best defenders. He had an unheard of shooting percentage for a 7'4'' center.
The Detroit Pistons were once known as the "Bad Boys," and Bill Laimbier was one of the baddest of them all. Laimbeer's father was a corporate hotshot who laughed at his son's NBA salary. Laimbeer continued with his hoop dreams, however, and won two championships with the Pistons.
Advertisement
With Jordan and Pippen taking all the limelight, it's easy to forget the centers on those legendary Bulls teams. Everybody remembers Dennis Rodman, but he was a power forward. Horace Grant split time between power forward and center. Perdue and Cartwright were the main centers.
Bill Rusell won 11 championships with the Boston Celtics and is considered one of the greatest players of all time. He dominated the league, but at just 6'8'' and 215 pounds, he'd hardly be a center in today's game.
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar is the NBA's all-time leading scorer and helped lead the LA Lakers to five championships. Shaquille O'Neal played eight seasons in Los Angeles and won three consecutive championships. Wilt Chamberlain won his second and last championship while he played for the Lakers.
Advertisement
The Cavaliers have only won one championship in history. Kevin Love and Tristan Thompson split duties at center during the championship run. Zydrunas Ilgauskas played center when the Cavs were swept by the Spurs in the 2007 NBA Finals.
Vlade Divac is a Kings legend who later became the vice president of basketball operations for the franchise. While in the front office, Divac famously traded away DeMarcus Cousins for next to nothing. Jerry Lucas played for the franchise when it was called the Cincinnati Royals.
Shaquille O'Neal has gone on record saying the only person to have ever dunked on him was Derrick Coleman. Shaq never forgot the dunk and actually broke the basketball hoop on a dunk when the two teams had a rematch.
Advertisement
Chris Bosh attained a lot of success, winning two championships alongside Dwyane Wade and LeBron James in Miami, but he was an all-star in Toronto before that. Jonas Valunciunas helped lead the franchise to its first and only championship in 2019.
Although Issel never won an NBA championship with the Nuggets, he's the franchise's second-leading scorer. When you combine his ABA and NBA stats, there are only three players in history who have scored more points than him.
Bob McAdoo played for the franchise when it was called the Buffalo Braves. That's when he won the NBA MVP Award. Bill Walton and McAdoo also played for the Celtics, but DeAndre Jordan never did. They all represent the Clippers.
Advertisement
Wes Unseld and Elvin Hayes are two of the best NBA players of all time, and both helped lead the Washington Bullets to the team's first and only championship in 1978. Hayes mostly played power forward alongside Unseld but filled in at the center role from time to time.
Dikembe Mutombo may not have been the most prolific offensive scorer, but he was an imposing figure on defense. He led the league in rebounds for two consecutive years on the Hawks, and in blocked shots for three consecutive years before that.
Moses Malone was one of the first basketball players to turn professional straight out of high school. Daryl Dawkins was nicknamed "Chocolate Thunder" and was known to shatter a backboard or two in his day; the NBA implemented breakaway rims because of Dawkins. Schayes helped lead the franchise to its first championship in 1955.
Advertisement
Muresan and Bol were both listed at 7'7", and no player in the NBA has matched or surpassed that. Wes Unseld is a full foot shorter than them but is the best center in the franchise's history. He led the team to its only championship in 1978.
Wilt Chamberlain and Nate Thurmond both played for the Warriors when they were still the Philadelphia Warriors. Johnston led the Philly Warriors to a championship in 1956, and Chamberlain won his first championship playing for the Philadelphia 76ers after the Warriors moved west.