This website needs js to run.

From Bill Russell to Steph Curry, all your favourite basketball players are right here, pixelated and exclusive on the Solana Blockchain. Be sure to follow our instagram for a chance to win "Dame Time". Every player can only be minted once, so be sure to get your hands on your favourite!

The Dream

204Views

Level

Icon

Era

1990s

Hakeem "The Dream" Olajuwon established himself as one of the most dominant and accomplished players of his era. His long list of accolades include an MVP award, two Finals MVP trophies and two Defensive Player of the Year honors. He was equally as dominant on defense as he was on the offensive end. Along with his 26,946 career points, he was named to the All-Defensive team nine times and is a three-time blocks leader (1990, ‘91 and ‘93). Career Olajuwon was selected first overall by the Houston Rockets in a stacked 1984 Draft class. He finished as the runner-up to Michael Jordan in the 1985 Rookie of the Year voting after averaging 20.6 points, 11.9 rebounds and 2.7 blocks per game in his rookie season. He achieved early team success and helped lead the Rockets past the defending-champion Los Angeles Lakers in the 1986 Western Conference finals. Houston would go on to lose in six games in The Finals to a Boston Celtics squad widely considered one of the greatest teams in NBA history. After several consecutive early playoff exits, the 1992-93 season marked a significant turnaround for Olajuwon and the Rockets. He had his best season to date under new coach Rudy Tomjanovich, setting career-highs in points per game (26.1) and assists per game (3.5) while leading Houston to a then franchise-record 55 wins and one game from the conference finals (an overtime Game 7 loss to the Seattle SuperSonics). The success of the 1992-93 season catapulted the Rockets into their championship years. With Olajuwon leading the way, Houston won back-to-back titles in 1994 and ‘95. The Rockets were the only franchise besides the Chicago Bulls to win multiple titles in the 1990s. In 1994 Olajuwon became the only player in NBA history to win a championship, MVP, Finals MVP and Defensive Player of the Year award in the same season. He averaged 26.9 points on 50% field goal shooting in the ‘94 Finals against Patrick Ewing and the New York Knicks. He outdid himself the following season by averaging 33.1 ppg, 10.3 rpg and 2.8 bpg in the ‘95 Finals against a young Shaquille O’Neal and the Orlando Magic. The '95 Rockets remain the lowest-seeded team to ever win an NBA title, as they entered the playoffs as a No. 6 seed and eliminated the Utah Jazz (60-22), Phoenix Suns (59-23), San Antonio Spurs (62-20) and Magic (57-25) -- in that order -- capping the run off with a sweep of Orlando. Olajuwon led the Rockets to the playoffs in 14 of his 17 seasons in Houston and is the franchise's all-time playoff leader in every major statistic except 3-pointers made, attempted and percentage, free throw percentage and field goal percentage. He was traded to the Toronto Raptors following the 2000-01 season before retiring after the 2001-02 season. His No. 34 jersey was retired by the Rockets later that year. A statue of Olajuwon planned for outside the Toyota Center, but it was changed to a bronze monument honoring Olajuwon, out of respect for his Muslim beliefs. A model of consistency, Olajuwon was a 12-time All-Star and 12-time All-NBA performer. He holds the Rockets' franchise record for virtually every regular-season category outside those tied to 3-point shooting. He was inducted into the Hall of Fame in 2016.
No Category
No Subcategory

DFmj...pNAW

The Dream

License: Pub/NonComm
Mintedon SolSea
0.5
Unverified NFT - please check everything before you buy
Doublecheck everything before you buy!How to spot fakes?
  • Details
  • History
  • Bids
Royalties on secondary sales: 7.5 %
Listed by: DFmj...pNAW
Mint address: EzxC...nEgb
NFT metadata: View on SolScan
More from this collection