Winning a championship at the college level is already a remarkable feat, but carrying that success into the NBA is even more rare. Only Bill Russell and KC Jones have achieved both as a duo, capturing two titles with the University of San Francisco before continuing their dominance with the Boston Celtics.
No other tandem has been able to replicate that accomplishment. However, there was the case of Hakeem Olajuwon and Clyde Drexler, who reunited with the Houston Rockets in 1995. While they never won a college championship together, they more than made up for it by securing an NBA title.
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The Dream admitted that the victory was just a bit more special than his one from the previous season, as it fulfilled something he and The Glide had missed in college.
“We didn’t do it together in college and came back and did it in the pros. That is something I will give a special chapter to in my book,” Olajuwon said via UPI after sweeping the Orlando Magic in the 1995 Finals.
Olajuwon and Drexler’s redemption in Houston
The Rockets’ 1994–95 campaign started strong but grew inconsistent as the season progressed. Even after acquiring Drexler midseason, Houston struggled to find stability, making their eventual championship run all the more remarkable.
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As a result, the Rockets finished the regular season with a 47–35 record, good enough for the sixth seed in the Western Conference. To repeat as champions, however, Houston would have to overcome higher-seeded opponents throughout the rest of the postseason.
Houston battled their way through the playoffs, defeating the Utah Jazz, Phoenix Suns and San Antonio Spurs to emerge from the West. In the 1995 NBA Finals, the Rockets’ depth and experience proved overwhelming for the young Orlando Magic, as they completed a sweep to secure back-to-back championships.
The Rockets’ unlikely playoff triumph
For then-coach Rudy Tomjanovich, the midseason arrival of Drexler gave the Rockets a much-needed boost. He noted that Clyde’s close relationship with Hakeem made the transition easier, and their chemistry quickly showed during the 1995 playoffs.
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“The only reason we made it is because it was Clyde and there was a relationship between him and Hakeem. Any other star would’ve had a hard time because I relied so heavily on Hakeem,” Tomjanovich said via SiriusXM NBA Radio.
The Rockets’ back-to-back championships in the mid-90s were especially significant, as they came in between the Michael Jordan-led Chicago Bulls’ title runs. Considering the intense competition at the time, it served as a true testament to Houston’s ability to rise to the challenge.
Even though that was the lone title for the Olajuwon-Drexler partnership, it revealed a larger truth in basketball: championships are not won by superstars alone. Depth, chemistry and trust among teammates often prove to be the deciding factors.
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That same truth was on display during the Oklahoma City Thunder’s 2025 championship run. Rather than relying on a single dominant figure, the Thunder leaned on its collective strength to win it all. Much like Houston in the mid-90s, OKC showed that unity and balance can overcome even the toughest competition.
This story was originally reported by Basketball Network on Aug 27, 2025, where it first appeared in the Old School section. Add Basketball Network as a Preferred Source by clicking here.