Dwight Howard made a bold move back in 2004—he skipped college altogether and jumped straight into the NBA, becoming the No. 1 draft pick that very year. From that moment, his career skyrocketed, and now, he’s finally being honored with a spot in the Naismith Hall of Fame. But looking back, it’s clear it wasn’t just about the fame and the trophies. At 19, he was a teenager, navigating high school finals, not Hall of Fame comparisons. At 19, when all he had to worry about was grades and not carrying the weight of a basketball legacy.
Lakers fans might mostly remember Dwight Howard as a key role player on that 2020 championship team or as an All-Star during the 2012-13 season. But before all that, Dwight’s legendary run started with the Orlando Magic, where he made his mark. He snagged three straight DPOYs from 2009 to 2011 and led the league in blocks twice. Standing at 6-foot-10, he also took home the Slam Dunk Contest title in 2008 and led the league in rebounds five times—four with Orlando and once with the Lakers. Now, as he’s being honored by the 2025 Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame as a first-ballot inductee, you can tell those early days and that journey still mean a lot to him.
Howard became visibly emotional while reflecting on skipping college. He opened up on The Lou Young Show about how, even though he was the No. 1 pick, he kept quiet about his future because he knew that once he crossed that graduation stage, his life would change forever. “I knew this was going to be my last time I was going to be able to like a kid,” he said, capturing that bittersweet moment perfectly.
Howard admitted how tough it was to realize that the fun and freedom of being a teenager were over. He felt the weight of suddenly being treated like a grown man, a “mature business basketball player,” when inside, he was still “a kid, big a– kid.” The hardest part, he said, was knowing his life was about to be under a microscope, and that he wouldn’t know who his real friends were anymore.
He remembered June 2004: riding in a Honda Civic with classmates en route to the library. Tears welling as he realized they’d head to college while he’d suit up for Magic practice, Dwight was moved to tears. As he put it, “It brought me to tears cuz I’m like, ‘Dang I’m going to miss all this.”. Well, it’ll all be worth it when Dwight Howard steps onto that Hall of Fame stage later this year, joining legends like Carmelo Anthony, Sue Bird, Maya Moore, Sylvia Fowles, and more.
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