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'It’s a Bird, It’s a Plane…': Shaquille O’Neal Uses Popular Superman Expression to Mock Ben Simmons on Shaqtin’ A Fool
Darren Yamashita-Imagn Images

While a new Superman movie is coming out in July, the former NBA superstar who branded himself as the hero is once again doing something Kal-El would never do and picking on people while they’re down. Shaquille O’Neal is once against beefing with players and turned his attention to a new group of victims in his latest segment of Shaqtin’ a Fool on Inside the NBA.

Shaq’s top-four list included Ja Morant being missing in action and the Miami Heat getting violently swept out of the playoffs by the Cleveland Cavaliers, but he saved his funniest moment for Ben Simmons, who is somehow not only still in the league, but still playing minutes for a playoff team in a close series.

Simmons has been averaging just over eight minutes per game off the bench for the Los Angeles Clippers in their first-round series, and Shaq had to laugh at his attempt at a turnaround hook in the lane which he amazingly airballed sideways. “It’s a bird, it’s a plane, no it’s a Ben Simmons jumper,” Shaq laughed.

That was Simmons’ only shot attempt in Game 5, and it perfectly encapsulated just how far the former Rookie of the Year and three-time All-Star has fallen.

The one time rising star has been decent for the Clippers since joining the team after a buyout with the Nets. His size has allowed him to transition to a backup center, while his playmaking is still clearly visible on the short roll. He has been important in relief of Ivica Zubac.

Sadly though, Simmons’ career has been a mess ever since he refused to shoot a layup in the closing seconds of Game 7 of the 2021 Eastern Conference semis, as injuries and mental struggles have derailed him.

Ben Simmons is about to play in another Game 7

The Clippers beat the Nuggets last night to force a decisive Game 7, the only first-round series that’s actually going the distance. Simmons hasn’t been getting much playing time, but he may get a chance to redeem himself from what happened in 2021. Hopefully if he draws any Superman references this time, it’s in a more positive way.

Simmons isn’t the only Clipper that will be trying to exorcise his postseason demons tomorrow. James Harden has had a checkered playoff past, though he went a long way towards erasing it by leading both teams with 28 points while playing all but one minute in Game 6.

This was Harden’s first elimination game win in five tries, with the last one occurring in the 2020 bubble when his Rockets beat the Thunder in a first-round Game 7 before getting swept by the eventual champion Lakers.

This Nuggets-Clippers series has been a wild one, with momentum changing hands seemingly every game. Will Nikola Jokic find a way to get Denver to the second-round? Will Harden and Simmons be vindicated after years of falling short in big moments? Will Kawhi Leonard do his own best Superman impression like he did in Game 2?

Either way, basketball fans will want to be tuned in tomorrow night on TNT at 7:30 p.m. ET.

This article first appeared on The SportsRush and was syndicated with permission.

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Dolphins' Tyreek Hill stirs up drama, calls for teammate to be benched in certain situations
NFL

Dolphins' Tyreek Hill stirs up drama, calls for teammate to be benched in certain situations

Tyreek Hill was just trying to be a good teammate, but his Miami Dolphins colleague didn't care for the message. On Friday, Hill gave a meaty performance during his media availability, broaching subjects from his mastery of the offense this year to saying he agreed with quarterback Tua Tagovailoa that he needed to be a better leader on the Dolphins for the upcoming season. Then he took a shot at running back De'Von Achane. He suggested the Dolphins keep the 5-foot-9, 191-pound back off the field in third-and-short situations. "Take (Achane) out on 3rd-down," Hills told reporters, via the Dolphins. "That's my honest opinion. If it's third-and-short, he's not a power back. I've been telling him that in the locker room... I love De'Von, but If I'm being honest, that's why you got Jaylen Wright, that's why you got Ollie Gordon." Achane responded to Hill giving his opinion to the media. "That's how you feel," Achane wrote with a laughing emoji. Achane rushed for 907 yards and six touchdowns on 203 carries last season. That's an average of 4.5 yards per rush. The Dolphins' backfield as a whole struggled in the run game last season, averaging a pedestrian 105.6 rushing yards per contest. Achane certainly didn't thrive on third-and-short, but Hill's comments feel unnecessary. Last season, Hill caught 81 passes for 959 yards and six touchdowns — his worst production since 2019, when he missed four games due to injury. Is Hill ready to admit that he's washed? Miami's offense was bad, and it didn't help that Tagovailoa missed time due to a concussion. Defenses took advantage of the Dolphins' limited and discombobulated offense last season. Miami's training-camp news conferences are becoming a concern. Hopefully for the team, Achane won't take the slight from Hill too personally.

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Five biggest losers from the 2025 MLB trade deadline

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