‘What is wrong with you?’ – Shaq causes havoc by destroying Inside the NBA set with kicks and punches

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Shaquille O’Neal left his Inside the NBA co-hosts in stitches after he destroyed some graphic boards during a segment on Wednesday’s broadcast.The four-time NBA champion was furious after losing in a quiz, which prompted him to take his anger out on the set.O’Neal threw several kicks and punches after failing at the quiz@ESPNO’Neal took a quiz on anatomy from Ernie Johnson in a segment on Inside the NBA, which now airs on ESPN after TNT lost the rights to air the NBA from this season.As the pair went through the quiz and O’Neal proceeded to get every question wrong, his two co-hosts, Charles Barkley and Kenny Smith, begun launching insults at him.“You a dumb doctor, man,” Barkley told Smith. Smith said, “You told us you were a doctor man.”With Shaq, who is famously known as Dr. O’Neal among other nicknames, getting attacked and failing to get a question right, he decided to throw a kick at one of the boards, causing it to fall down on the floor once the quiz had ended.He then went to the other board and threw a punch before kicking it and causing it to also fall to the floor.“What is wrong with you?” Smith asked.“Can you believe a doctor being that dumb and just messing everything up,” Barkley added.This is the second time within a year that O’Neal has destroyed part of the Inside the NBA set.Last December, O’Neal and Smith raced to the big video board during Kenny’s halftime analysis segment.After the Lakers legend won the race, he decided to give the board a tap, but he went so hard it broke.It’s not the first time O’Neal has broken sets while on Inside the NBAGETTYBy the end, both boards weren’t standing in their original places anymore@ESPNThe segments serve as a good reminder to fans that despite the program no longer airing on TNT, the fabric of the show is still very much intact.The show, which has won 21 Sports Emmy Awards, was at risk of ending after Warner Bros, which owns TNT, was not part of the NBA’s new 11-year $76 billion TV rights deal.However, ESPN agreed a deal with TNT to sub-license the program, meaning it’s still filmed and shot in Atlanta by the same producers and crew.Some fans were concerned that ESPN could meddle with the show and ruin what is a highly popular program that has run since 1989.The deal has also seen the likes of Smith sign a deal with the broadcaster to feature on some of their other programs, like First Take, alongside Stephen A. Smith.Stay up to date with the latest from the NBA across all platforms – follow our dedicated talkSPORT USA Facebook page and subscribe to our talkSPORT USA YouTube channel for all the news, exclusives, interviews and more.