NBA legend Shaquille O'Neal ends the year in style as he sends crowd wild at Miami nightclub DJ set

By Daily Mail (U.S.) | Created at 2025-01-01 00:19:56 | Updated at 2025-01-03 22:05:46 2 days ago
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By OLIVER SALT

Published: 23:30 GMT, 31 December 2024 | Updated: 23:49 GMT, 31 December 2024

Shaquille O'Neal has brought out his much-loved 'DJ Diesel' persona once again after getting on the decks at a New Year's Eve party in Miami.

The NBA great, 52, sent the crowd wild as he threw down the late-night set at E11EVEN Miami alongside his 27-year-old son Myles.

Shaq could be seen hyping up partygoers with some electronic and dubstep tunes throughout the early hours of the morning, having arrived at the venue at 2:30am and taken to the stage half-hour later.

He kicked things off with Rufus Du Sol's 'Innerbloom' and got the crowd going with 'Put up your middle fingers, Miami!' before Myles took over at 4:30am.

O'Neal, whose future as a member of popular basketball show 'Inside The NBA' remains unclear, recently revealed that becoming a DJ and performing at live concerts saved him after he retired from the sport.

The former LA Lakers center has enjoyed a massively successful post-basketball career as an analyst and entrepreneur.

NBA icon Shaquille O'Neal has brought out his much-loved 'DJ Diesel' persona once again

Shaq sent the crowd wild as he threw down a set in Miami alongside his 27-year-old son Myles

He hyped up partygoers with electronic and dubstep tunes throughout the early morning

Shaq recently revealed that becoming a DJ saved him after he retired from basketball in 2011

However, it was his time behind a DJ booth that truly gave him that same feeling as being on the court.

'I started DJing because it gives me the same adrenaline boost that a championship game would give me,' O'Neal told PEOPLE earlier this year. 

'I was lost because I had planned to retire two years after I retired. So I wasn't really prepared.'

O'Neal retired from the NBA in 2011 after a one-year tenure with the Boston Celtics. He only got behind the decks full-time after basketball six years later, starting with a diss track of LaVar Ball. 

He was 39 when he retired from the NBA, after averaging 9.2 points per game, the lowest of his dominant NBA career.

The four-time NBA champion is widely considered one of the best centers in NBA history and displayed his prime form in spurts with the Celtics. 

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