The Oakland Press

Shaquille O’Neal ready to rumble in tag match for AEW

- BY Dan Gelston

Hack-a-Shaq is coming to All Elite Wrestling.

Shaquille O’Neal may again absorb some intentiona­l hits in his tag team match this week. The 7-foot-1 basketball Hall of Famer gets his chance to dish out retributio­n — maybe a slam, a side headlock or a clotheslin­e — when he steps into the ring for his first match with AEW.

“Oh, I’m winning,” O’Neal said. “Guaranteed.”

O’Neal says he’s a lifelong wrestling fan and ripped off a list of favorite wrestlers from Tony Atlas and Junkyard Dog to Andre the Giant and Brock Lesnar.

Big guys. Tough guys. Like Shaq.

O’Neal is set to perform in his first competitiv­e match when he teams in

All Elite Wrestling with Jade Cargill in a mixed tag to take on Cody Rhodes and

Red Velvet at Daily’s Place in Jacksonvil­le, Florida, on Wednesday’s episode of “Dynamite.”

The seeds for a feud were set up last November when Cargill appeared on “Dynamite” and trash-talked Rhodes that O’Neal was the real giant-killer of pro wrestling. O’Neal responded on “Inside the NBA” and told Rhodes to name the place.

“I’m the type, I can never back down from a challenge,” O’Neal told The Associated Press. “I’m not a profession­al wrestler, but I’ve been in a match before. I’ve got a lot of moves in my arsenal. When you step inside somebody’s world, you have to stick to what you’re masterful at. I’m not acrobatic. I’m not going to be jumping off the ropes. I’m coming with the power game. When I get hands on him, I’m going to display this power.”

O’Neal visited the wrestling-training facility Nightmare Factory in the Norcross, Georgia, but has otherwise limited profession­al wrestling training.

“I’m the type that if I have a look and see you do it, I got it,” O’Neal said.

O’Neal was crushed as a teenager when Hulk Hogan slammed and defeated Andre the Giant in the main event of WrestleMan­ia III.

Once he became an NBA star, Shaq Diesel — a nickname made for pro wrestling —- eventually had a word with the Hulkster.

“I told him, ‘you broke my heart when you bodyslamme­d Andre the Giant,’” O’Neal said. “I cried as a kid. I really did.”

All was — mostly — forgiven seven years later in 1994 when Hogan beat Ric Flair at Bash at the Beach and celebrated with O’Neal. O’Neal has been as well traveled inside the squared circle as some of his favorite stars. He stood side-byvery-large-side with Hogan in both World Championsh­ip Wrestling and Impact Wrestling, and even competed in the Andre the Giant battle royal at WrestleMan­ia in 2016.

O’Neal, who boxed Shane Mosley in 2010, stared down the 7-foot Big Show in WWE’s battle royal before they teamed up to double choke-slam Kane. The remaining wrestlers conspired to toss O’Neal over the ropes and eliminate him from the match.

“I wanted to get my hands on the Big Show,” O’Neal said.

O’Neal might get his chance after Show left WWE after a 20-plus year stint there and is set to make his AEW debut on Wednesday.

What a coincidenc­e!

The 48-year-old O’Neal, who won four NBA titles over his Hall of Fame career, is the latest in a long line of active and retired athletes who wrestled in attraction matches. Dennis Rodman and Karl Malone wrestled for WCW in the 1990s, Lawrence Taylor wrestled in the main event of WrestleMan­ia XI, and Mike Tyson has made appearance­s for WWE and AEW.

“This one will top them all,” O’Neal said.

CHARLOTTE, N.C. » Hendrick Motorsport­s believes in developing talent within. Take a job in the parts department or sweep floors in the chassis shop, every entry point within the company offers opportunit­y to advance. Especially crew chiefs. The Hendrick system makes it a priority to nurture its young talent and incentiviz­e staying with the organizati­on. A mechanic can pay his dues, climb into a leadership position with a seven-figure salary and compete for championsh­ips.

The formula produced eight different Cup Series crew chiefs the last two decades, including championsh­ip-winners Chad Knaus and Alan Gustafson. HMS went outside the organizati­on only three times in that period: Dale Earnhardt Jr. brought Tony Eury Jr. with him in 2008; Kenny Francis came with Kasey Kahne in 2012; and Keith Rodden replaced France three years later.

The current four-car Hendrick lineup features three homegrown crew chiefs. The fourth? Well, the team broke from pattern and dipped down to the Truck Series for its newest hire.

Knaus, winner of seven titles with Jimmie Johnson, moved into an executive role this year and left a vacancy atop William Byron’s young team. When asked who he wanted as his new crew chief, Byron wanted Rudy Fugle, the guy he spent one season with in Trucks when Byron was 18 and brand new to NASCAR’s national level.

It was an unusual request — Fugle had never worked in the Cup Series and only crew chiefed one Xfinity Series season 11 years ago — and Hendrick rarely hires outside the organizati­on.

“It can be an intimidati­ng place. We tend to bring in people young,” Knaus, now the competitio­n director said Monday. “The bloodlines run really deep at HMS and we have a culture here that is pretty unique. Looking inside is what we typically do, but in this situation, we felt we wanted someone with experience who had a significan­t amount of success and could handle pressure.”

Fugle delivered Sunday in his third race as Byron’s crew chief. The duo won at Homestead-Miami Speedway, the same track where they’d won their seventh and final race together in 2016 when Byron drove a truck for Kyle Busch Motorsport­s.

The win made Fugle the second-fastest crew chief to win at Hendrick Motorsport­s, ahead of Steve Letarte with Jeff Gordon (sixth race), Harry Hyde with Geoff Bodine (eighth) and Robbie Loomis with Gordon (ninth). Only Gary Nelson in 1986 made it to victory lane faster than Fugle with a Bodine victory in the Daytona 500.

Fugle had been identified in 2019 as a potential Cup crew chief when Knaus took over the No. 24 team. Knaus was searching for a new engineer and Fugle became a candidate at Byron’s suggestion. But as the interview process stretched on, Knaus recognized that Fugle was effectivel­y running Busch’s Truck Series team and was overqualif­ied to be an engineer.

In eight seasons at

KBM, Fugle led the program to two driver championsh­ips and five owner titles. His trucks won 28 races, seven with Byron in 2016. When Knaus moved into management, he circled back to Fugle.

“He’s battled for championsh­ips, he’s managed a lot and he has fit in remarkably well,” Knaus said. “Quite honestly, I think that’s from working with Kyle. Kyle has a very high level expectatio­n of everything he does and that’s the same thing we have at HMS.

“So I think Rudy came in not as intimidate­d as somebody else may have been in that role.”

Fugle, for his part, credited Knaus for handing him a turn-key race team. Although he can make personnel changes at his discretion, Fugle has so far retained the No. 24 personnel he inherited.

And with Byron, the hard work had already bene done. Hendrick moved Knaus to Byron in 2019 after an underwhelm­ing rookie season in which Byron asked to be paired with someone who would push him.

Byron in two seasons under Knaus showed steady improvemen­t, twice qualified for the playoffs and earned his first career victory in last August’s regular-season finale.

“Chad prepped William to get to this point. I could not have done that three years ago,” Fugle said. “He built a great team. I came in and this was an amazing race team. We’ve got all the right pieces.”

Previous experience together and an existing relationsh­ip gave Fugle a jump on his rookie Cup season. Byron qualified on the front row for the Daytona 500 but a car capable of contending was damaged in an early crash. The No. 24 has shown speed and was actually dominant in Sunday’s victory — Byron led a race-high 102 of 267 laps.

Next up is Las Vegas Motor Speedway, a traditiona­l intermedia­te track that will be a truer indicator of where teams currently stack up. Byron and Fugle already have a playoff berth via the victory — a cushion that eases pressure as they continue to build their team.

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