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Shaquille O’Neal shares his take on who’d win between him and Victor Wembanyama in a one-on-one

Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images
Photo by Ronald Cortes/Getty Images
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Shaquille O’Neal did not need long to answer the Victor Wembanyama one-on-one question, even if the debate goes far beyond his punchline.

The matchup is fun because it is really two arguments in one: overwhelming force against unprecedented range.

It also has to be separated by age, because Wembanyama is still 22 and nowhere near the finished version of himself.

Shaquille O’Neal still sees power as the Wembanyama problem

Speaking to The Post during the NBA Finals, O’Neal was asked how he would have handled a one-on-one matchup with Wembanyama.

“Oh, stop it,” O’Neal told The Post, flashing a smile. “Let’s talk desserts. He’s too light in the cakes for me. Stop it. But I’m not known for defense, so he probably would’ve scored a few points also. There’s no guarding me one-on-one, so you can’t ask me that question. He’s a great player. This is his time now. This is not about me.”

That confidence is backed by one of the most overpowering resumes in NBA history. O’Neal averaged 23.7 points, 10.9 rebounds, and 2.3 blocks across 19 seasons, won four titles, three Finals MVPs, one regular-season MVP, and made 15 All-Star teams.

Orlando Magic v Washington Bullets
Photo by Focus on Sport/Getty Images

Prime Shaq was not just big. He bent defenses until they broke, and in a one-on-one format with space near the rim, even Wembanyama’s length would have to reckon with that weight, footwork and force.

Victor Wembanyama gives Shaquille O’Neal a harder age-22 puzzle

The fairer comparison is 22-year-old Shaq against 22-year-old Wembanyama, and that is where the conversation changes. O’Neal at that age averaged 29.3 points, 11.4 rebounds, and 2.4 blocks for Orlando, led the league in scoring, and took the Magic to the 1995 Finals.

Wembanyama is already more complete in a different way. He has guard range, pull-up shooting, real ball-handling, and elite rim protection, with a 2025-26 season of 25.0 points, 11.5 rebounds, 3.1 assists, and a league-leading 3.1 blocks.

His playoff run has pushed the argument further. Entering Game 5 against the Knicks, he has averaged 23.2 points, 10.8 rebounds, and 3.5 blocks, while his Finals numbers sit at 27.8 points, 10.5 rebounds, and 3.2 blocks through four games.

Wembanyama’s career already includes Rookie of the Year, Defensive Player of the Year, All-NBA status, and career production above 20 points, 10 rebounds, and three blocks per game.

At 22, Wembanyama is the more complete player. Prime Shaq is still the more terrifying one-on-one problem.