Hakeem Olajuwon charges $50K to teach what cannot be taught — good for him
Hakeem Olajuwon was a 12-time All-Star, a two-time NBA champ, the 1994 MVP, and a Hall of Famer credits: Marcio Jose Sanchez | source: AP One of the best/least consequential storylines in all of sports is of the big man who goes to Hakeem Olajuwon’s Dream Shake academy to learn one of the most lethal, and unteachable, moves in the history of the NBA. At $50,000 a session, it’s as close to a Ponzi scheme as you’re going to get without it technically being illegal. It’s like asking Dr. J to teach you that up-and-under, behind-the-backboard, reverse finger roll he did against the Los Angeles Lakers in the NBA Finals as if it’s even possible.
So when Gilbert Arenas went on his podcast where he yells at a camera to trash the Houston Rockets Hall of Famer for overcharging, he’s (partially) right.
I didn’t watch it, but some breaking news writer at SI did, and transcribed the most salacious segment, so if you’re into hot takes, but not moving pictures with sound, here’s what Arenas said.
“Nobody wants the Hakeem Olajuwon skyhook. Nobody wants none of that sh*t. …You should be ashamed of yourself, charging these young whippersnappers $50,000. When you came in the league in 1984, you wasn’t even making $50,000 a game. You’re trying to make your month back through the youth! Do not charge these boys 50 f*cking grand for that blush*t. He ain’t been good since the ’90s. That means all the moves from the 2000s, he don’t know. 2010s, he don’t know. 2020s, he don’t know. Who the f*ck you gonna do the moves on? Wembanyama?”
I’m not sure why Arenas, who has been irrelevant for only slightly less time than Olajuwon, would knock a former player’s hustle, especially, as he pointed out, with what NBA players used to make. Hakeem is two, three, four, five, six times the hooper that Arenas was, and yet Agent Zero out-earned the Dream for their careers, $163 million to $97 million.
Also, it’s not a “skyhook,” and if any of these contemporary bigs had a 10th of the footwork that Olajuwon did, the low-post game wouldn’t be on life support. Victor Wembanyama would be unguardable if he developed a little faceup, shake action in the 15 feet and under range, but no, let the guy who’s 7-foot-5 dribble out on the perimeter, and shoot 3s.
Hell, if prime Olajuwon was in the league today, he’d head up one of the most destructive defensive units imaginable with his mix of agility, length, and quickness. And lest we forget, Hakeem did have range, he just opted to twist centers like Shaq and Patrick Ewing into pretzels on the block.
The “young whippersnappers” Arenas referred to are getting record-breaking contracts, and have more than enough money to splurge. Even if it is a pipedream, at least the $50,000 is going toward on-court progress, and not a gold-plated desert eagle.
If Gilbert had any brain function, he’d take note, and charge exorbitant fees to be a shooting coach. It is a more useful skill in this era of basketball, and certainly more of a contribution to the game than the Gilbert Arenas vlog.
March Madness Sunday Bets: Texas Tech, Tennessee
Venezuela’s WBC Win Exposed What Team USA Must Fix
UFC London Betting Picks: Best Plays for Fight Night
Duke Survives Upset Scare, Now Set to Roll Past TCU
Akron vs Texas Tech, Clemson vs Iowa: Best Bets for Friday
- Akron vs Texas Tech, Clemson vs Iowa: Best Bets for Friday
- NCAA Tournament Thursday Picks: Why Georgia and Saint Mary’s Offer Value
- NBA Picks Today: Best Bets for Warriors vs Celtics, Lakers vs Rockets
- Miami (OH) vs SMU Prediction: Best Bet for NCAA Play-In Game
- MLB Home Run Leader Future Picks: Best Bets for 2026 Season
- Top NBA Picks for Today: Thunder vs Magic, Cavs vs Bucks, Nuggets vs 76ers
- Best Future Bets for MLB Strikeout Leader: Crochet, Gilbert, and Cease

