Shaq & Chuck Go at It Over Giannis & Haliburton’s Dad’s Confrontation – Inside the NBA
The bright lights of the Inside the NBA studio flickered on, illuminating four of basketball’s most familiar faces. Shaquille O’Neal, Charles Barkley, Kenny Smith, and Ernie Johnson had just watched a playoff series between the Indiana Pacers and Milwaukee Bucks that would be remembered for more than just the basketball. As the broadcast opened, Ernie set the stage: “Unbelievable finish, fellas, but there was some talking after the game…”
The footage rolled. On the court, Giannis Antetokounmpo and Tyrese Haliburton stood face-to-face, tension in the air. But it wasn’t just the players—Tyrese’s father, John Haliburton, had made his way onto the hardwood, exchanging heated words with Giannis. The confrontation was brief, but the image of Haliburton’s dad, towel in hand, jawing at the Bucks’ superstar, was already ricocheting across social media.
Back in the studio, Shaq grinned, but Charles Barkley shook his head. “We love Mr. Haliburton, but come see the show, don’t be the show. You don’t run on the court and talk to a player like that. No, you don’t.”
Kenny nodded. “You can’t run on the stage, you can’t run on the court and harass everybody. He’s not supposed to be out there.”
Shaq, arms crossed, wasn’t convinced. “Man, Giannis said something to him. He probably knows who his dad is.”
Charles cut in, voice rising. “Stop it. He’s not supposed to be on the court. You can yell what you want to from the stands, but you’re an idiot if you think that’s right. And if you think he’s right, you’re an idiot too!”
The debate heated up. Shaq, ever the contrarian, insisted that stuff like this “comes with the territory,” that players have to deal with fans and family members all the time. Charles was having none of it. “Just because your son’s playing doesn’t mean you’re entitled to be on the court. He didn’t play in the game! There’s no entitlement.”
Kenny tried to mediate, but the two Hall-of-Famers were locked in. “Giannis said something to him,” Shaq repeated, but Charles was adamant: “No, his dad was 100% wrong. He shouldn’t be on the court, talking to players.”
The studio banter was classic Inside the NBA—funny, passionate, and unfiltered. But the conversation turned serious as Ernie played postgame interviews. Giannis, still in his jersey, was asked about the incident. “At first, I thought it was a fan,” he admitted. “Then I realized it was Tyrese’s dad. He came onto the floor, showed me a towel with his son’s face, and started cursing at me. That’s totally unacceptable. I’m happy for him and his son, but you can’t come at me like that.”
Tyrese Haliburton himself had already apologized for his father’s actions. “I don’t think my pop was in the right at all. Unfortunate, but this series was a lot of war of words, a lot of antics. That’s just part of the rivalry. But being humble in victory—that’s how I am.”
Back in the studio, the argument raged on. “So what would you have done?” Shaq challenged, turning to Charles. “If a fan or a dad comes up to you after a game, puts a towel in your face, and curses at you?”
Charles shrugged. “I played 19 years. That happens plenty of times. You can’t do nothing, we’re not allowed. But it’s not the same when it’s a family member on the court. A fan, maybe, but not a family member.”
Shaq rolled his eyes. “It’s the same thing. It comes with the territory.”
“No, it does not,” Charles shot back. “If Giannis had whooped his ass, Giannis would be in trouble. No fan should come on the court. Just because you pay for a ticket doesn’t entitle you to be on the floor.”
The debate swirled, as only Inside the NBA could deliver. Kenny, ever the voice of reason, pointed out the obvious: “There’s a difference between being excited about winning and getting in someone’s face. You don’t hear me whine about losing—I go home, regroup, and come back. But you’re not entitled to antagonize players.”
Charles nodded, then made a pointed comparison: “Remember when LeBron’s mom came on the court in Cleveland and said something to a player? LeBron told her, ‘Sit your ass down.’ Because he understood that’s not her place. She loves him, but she was wrong.”
The studio laughed, but the message was clear. Respect the boundaries.
Ernie, always the steady hand, brought up another example: “Remember when Masai Ujiri wasn’t allowed on the floor after the Raptors won the championship because he didn’t have a credential? Even the president of a team isn’t entitled to be out there.”
As the show wound down, Charles summed up the consensus: “I’m glad Tyrese apologized. I’m glad it was left there. But you can’t have family members on the court, antagonizing players. That’s not right.”
Shaq, still not quite ready to concede, muttered, “It comes with the territory…” but even he knew the studio—and the basketball world—wasn’t buying it this time.
As the credits rolled, the Inside the NBA crew had done what they always do: turned a moment of basketball drama into a larger conversation about sportsmanship, boundaries, and the unpredictable humanity that makes the NBA so compelling. The game may have ended, but the story—and the debate—would live on.