Houston Rockets
Series Flow
4
Wins
0
Losses
Regular Season
47–35
Win–Loss
Playoff Record
15–7
Win–Loss
Finals
4–0
vs Orlando Magic
Finals MVP
Olajuwon
Hakeem
Houston Rockets
47–35Orlando Magic
57–25The 1994-95 Orlando Magic were the most exciting young team in basketball — Shaquille O'Neal was the most physically dominant player alive and Anfernee "Penny" Hardaway had emerged as one of the game's brightest offensive talents. They won 57 games and were widely favored to win the championship. The Nick Anderson free throw sequence in Game 1 changed everything, and Houston's veteran experience and Hakeem's supreme skill proved ultimately decisive.

Finals MVP
Hakeem Olajuwon
#34 · Center
32.8
PPG
11.5
RPG
5.5
APG
2.0
BPG
52.2
FG%
Hakeem Olajuwon's 1995 Finals performance was arguably even more dominant than his championship-winning run the year before — 32.8 points, 11.5 rebounds, and 5.5 assists per game across a four-game sweep. He neutralized Shaquille O'Neal through skill and superior footwork, proving that technique could defeat raw physical dominance, and delivered the most comprehensive Finals performance in back-to-back championship history.
Second consecutive Finals MVP — joined Michael Jordan, Moses Malone, Larry Bird, and Kareem Abdul-Jabbar as the only players to win consecutive Finals MVP awards
Averaged 32.8 PPG in the sweep — one of the highest Finals scoring averages in the modern era
Neutralized Shaquille O'Neal in the most anticipated center matchup in Finals history — technique over power
Completed back-to-back championships as the unquestioned best player in professional basketball
120
HOU
118
ORL
One of the most dramatic Games 1 in Finals history turned on a sequence that would haunt Nick Anderson forever. With the Magic leading and the clock winding down, Anderson stepped to the free throw line and missed four consecutive attempts — each one a chance to put the game away — allowing the Rockets to tie the score and force overtime. In the extra period, Kenny Smith and Robert Horry came up huge, and Houston escaped with a 120-118 victory that fundamentally altered the psychological landscape of the series. Orlando never fully recovered from the gift they handed away.
Houston Rockets
Hakeem Olajuwon
31 pts · 14 reb · 5 astOverwhelming in the paint for four quarters and overtime — his inside dominance gave the Rockets the foundation to survive.
Kenny Smith
23 pts · 5 astThe Jet's overtime shooting was the catalyst — his clutch perimeter production decided the most dramatic game of the series.
ORL
Nick Anderson
15 pts · 6 reb (0-4 FT in final 10 sec)Four consecutive missed free throws in the game's final seconds — one of the most consequential individual failures in Finals history.
117
HOU
106
ORL
Hakeem Olajuwon gave a masterclass in what separates skill from power. Against Shaquille O'Neal — the most physically dominant player in the league — Hakeem used footwork, positioning, and touch to score at will, while his defensive presence made the Orlando center uncomfortable at both ends. The Magic fell behind 2-0 with Houston in full control, and the series' most anticipated matchup had been definitively won by the craftsman over the behemoth.
Houston Rockets
Hakeem Olajuwon
34 pts · 11 rebThe footwork clinic continued — Shaq simply could not match Hakeem's speed and technical brilliance around the basket.
Clyde Drexler
21 pts · 7 astThe Glide controlled the perimeter and created open looks that Orlando's backcourt couldn't keep pace with.
ORL
Shaquille O'Neal
20 pts · 11 rebPhysically imposing as always, but Hakeem's experience edge defined the matchup — Shaq would spend years studying what happened here.
106
HOU
103
ORL
On Orlando's home court, the Rockets showed why champions are made of different material. The Magic made it genuinely competitive — the crowd roared, the score was tight, and Orlando fought with the desperation of a team down 2-0 — but Houston's composure held firm. Sam Cassell was brilliant in the clutch, and Hakeem's defensive blueprint for handling Shaquille O'Neal — force him wide, make him catch deep, contest with discipline rather than power — was now being studied and copied across every level of the sport.
Houston Rockets
Hakeem Olajuwon
31 pts · 14 rebHis defensive approach to containing Shaq was as impressive as his scoring — technique over power, intelligence over brute force.
Sam Cassell
24 pts · 8 astFearless in the hostile Orlando arena — his clutch creation and finishing gave the Rockets the scoring they needed alongside Hakeem.
ORL
Anfernee Hardaway
25 pts · 7 astThe Magic's most dynamic player gave a brilliant individual performance that kept Orlando alive but couldn't generate enough help.
113
HOU
101
ORL
Hakeem Olajuwon closed out the sweep and won his second consecutive Finals MVP in a performance that completed one of the most astonishing postseason runs in NBA history. The Rockets — the sixth seed who had beaten Utah, Phoenix, and San Antonio before sweeping the favored Magic — finished the journey in Orlando. As the buzzer sounded, Kenny Smith sprinted onto the floor waving a small Rockets flag, and Rudy Tomjanovich raised his arms. Back-to-back champions. The dynasty had its second ring in two years.
Houston Rockets
Hakeem Olajuwon
35 pts · 15 reb · 5 astThe clinching performance of a second consecutive Finals MVP campaign — Hakeem at the absolute summit of his powers.
Mario Elie
21 pts · 5 astHis perimeter shooting gave the Rockets the spacing they needed to completely free Hakeem — a perfect veteran contribution in the clincher.
ORL
Shaquille O'Neal
25 pts · 14 rebHis most dominant game of the series came too late — Hakeem had won the argument between skill and power definitively.
Clyde Drexler
#22 · Shooting Guard
19.8
PPG
7.0
RPG
5.3
APG
Back-to-back championship glory was everything Drexler had chased across his years in Portland. His athleticism, shooting range, and defensive intensity gave the Rockets the perimeter weapon that Orlando's backcourt could not match. The Glide was at his veteran best, and winning his second consecutive title cemented a legacy that had been in doubt during his Portland years.
Won his second consecutive NBA championship — completed the legacy he had been building since the 1992 Finals with Portland
Sam Cassell
#10 · Guard
20.5
PPG
6.0
APG
52.1
FG%
A year removed from his rookie sensation Finals run, Cassell was even better in 1995. His ability to create off the dribble, knock down mid-range shots, and make clutch plays in pressure moments made him the Rockets' most important offensive piece behind Hakeem. He was simply too skilled for Orlando's guards at both ends of the floor.
Mario Elie
#21 · Small Forward
14.3
PPG
48.6
3P%
1.5
SPG
The veteran wing shooter provided the perimeter spacing that the Rockets needed alongside Hakeem's interior dominance. Elie's three-point accuracy forced Orlando's defense to respect the Houston perimeter, creating the gaps that Hakeem could exploit from the post. His kiss three-pointer in the Western Conference Finals against San Antonio became one of the playoff's iconic moments.
Robert Horry
#25 · Power Forward
10.5
PPG
6.3
RPG
1.8
BPG
Big Shot Bob's championship DNA was on full display across the 1995 playoff run. His shot-blocking, defensive versatility against Orlando's athleticism, and ability to knock down big shots from the corners when the defense collapsed on Hakeem made him an essential piece of the Rockets' title defense.
The 1994-95 Orlando Magic were the most exciting young team in basketball — Shaquille O'Neal was the most physically dominant player alive and Anfernee "Penny" Hardaway had emerged as one of the game's brightest offensive talents. They won 57 games and were widely favored to win the championship. The Nick Anderson free throw sequence in Game 1 changed everything, and Houston's veteran experience and Hakeem's supreme skill proved ultimately decisive.
Shaquille O'Neal
#32 · Center
28.0
PPG
12.5
RPG
2.5
BPG
The most physically dominant force in basketball was neutralized not by matching power but by Hakeem's superior footwork and intelligence. This series began Shaq's lifelong study of post technique that would make him even more formidable in the championship years ahead.
Anfernee Hardaway
#1 · Point Guard
25.5
PPG
7.8
APG
5.0
RPG
Penny was brilliant throughout — his combination of size, skill, and passing vision made him one of the most complete young guards in the league. He simply ran into the best team in basketball at their peak, and injuries would later prevent him from returning to this level.
Nick Anderson
#25 · Shooting Guard
13.5
PPG
5.5
RPG
1.3
SPG
A capable performer throughout most of the series whose four consecutive missed free throws in the final seconds of Game 1 became the defining moment — the one that the Magic could never psychologically escape, and that Anderson carried with him for the rest of his career.
Houston Rockets
Back-to-back NBA championships — just the eighth franchise in history to win consecutive titles
Hakeem Olajuwon
Second consecutive Finals MVP — only the fourth player to accomplish this, joining Bill Russell, Willis Reed, and Michael Jordan
Houston Rockets
Won as the sixth seed — the lowest-seeded team to win an NBA championship in the modern era
Hakeem Olajuwon
Neutralized Shaquille O'Neal — the most physically dominant player alive — through technique and footwork alone
Nick Anderson
Missed four consecutive free throws in the final 10 seconds of Game 1 regulation — one of the most pivotal individual moments in Finals history
Houston Rockets
Playoff run included series wins over Utah, Phoenix, San Antonio, and Orlando — four completely different challenge types neutralized
Rudy Tomjanovich
Second consecutive championship as head coach — one of only five coaches in NBA history to win back-to-back titles
Clyde Drexler
Won second consecutive championship — completed a two-year run that erased any doubt about his Hall of Fame legacy
The 1994-95 Houston Rockets had no business being in the NBA Finals. They finished the regular season 47-35 — barely above .500, the sixth seed in the Western Conference — and were dismissed by virtually every analyst as too old, too inconsistent, and too undermanned to make a serious run. What followed was one of the greatest postseason journeys in league history: fifteen wins across four series, each against a different style of opponent.
The series' most anticipated storyline was the center matchup: Hakeem Olajuwon versus Shaquille O'Neal. Shaq was 7'1", nearly 300 pounds, and essentially unstoppable in the post through sheer physical force. Hakeem was the most technically skilled center of his era, his Dream Shake footwork a work of art, his defensive intelligence unmatched by anyone in the game. The result was a masterclass in the triumph of technique over power — Hakeem averaged 32.8 points and 11.5 rebounds across the sweep while neutralizing O'Neal at both ends.
Nick Anderson's four consecutive missed free throws in the final seconds of Game 1 regulation remains one of the pivotal individual moments in Finals history. Had Anderson converted even one, the Magic would have won Game 1 and potentially changed the psychological composition of the entire series. Instead, the Rockets survived in overtime, and Orlando never recovered the confidence they had before that sequence. A series that might have gone seven games ended in four.
The back-to-back championships completed Hakeem Olajuwon's transformation from great player to all-time legend. With Michael Jordan absent for the 1994 title and returning only in March 1995, Hakeem owned two full years as the unquestioned best player in basketball. His consecutive Finals MVP awards established him permanently among the game's most elite players — a center from Lagos who had taken the most beautiful footwork basketball had ever seen and used it to build the most improbable dynasty of the decade.
Nobody expected the 1994-95 Houston Rockets to be here. A 47-35 regular season, the sixth seed in the Western Conference, an aging roster with injury concerns — the narrative was already being written about a team past its peak. Then the playoffs began, and Hakeem Olajuwon reminded everyone that the best basketball of the year has nothing to do with what happened between October and April.
The Rockets' path to Orlando required four different opponents and fifteen wins. They beat Utah when nobody thought they could close it out. They beat Phoenix in seven when the Suns had every reason to feel confident. They beat the San Antonio Spurs in six, ending that series with Mario Elie's legendary "kiss that" three-pointer in the final seconds. By the time they arrived in Houston for Game 1, the Rockets had already earned their place in history, regardless of seeding.
The defining moment of Game 1 didn't involve Hakeem at all. Nick Anderson stepped to the free throw line in the final seconds with a lead that should have ended the series opener for Orlando. He missed four in a row. The Rockets tied it. Won it in overtime. A series that might have gone seven games ended in four, and the psychological damage to Orlando was irreparable.
Hakeem's 32.8-point, 11.5-rebound, 5.5-assist sweep of Shaquille O'Neal was one of the most complete individual Finals performances in the modern era — technique defeating power in the most complete way possible. When the final buzzer sounded in Orlando and Kenny Smith sprinted across the court waving a small Rockets flag, the Houston Rockets had their second consecutive championship. And Hakeem Olajuwon had secured his place among the eternal greats.
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