This is not a real sport. The WNBA is staging this to goose clicks and betting. They know the product sucks and they want to make it as crazy as possible. Welcome to the WWE-NBA. https://t.co/8K0XgpM2Jf
If the dildos cause viewership in the WNBA to go up, which translates to higher pay for athletes, do the players accept the reality of the dildos, or do they dismiss it for making a mockery of the game. Will they make a faustian bargain with the Green Gobbler? 😂 https://t.co/4FJzP742U6
“mom, how did we get so rich?” “your dad put down a sizeable prop bet and correctly guessed the color of a dildo that was thrown onto the court of a WNBA game” https://t.co/dwZq04fSff
The WNBA is confronting a spate of fan misconduct after a bright green sex toy was thrown onto the floor during Tuesday night’s game between the Indiana Fever and the Los Angeles Sparks at Crypto.com Arena. The object landed near Fever forward Sophie Cunningham with 2:05 remaining in the second quarter before Sparks guard Kelsey Plum kicked it off the court. Although play resumed quickly, Sparks coach Lynne Roberts condemned the act as “ridiculous” and “dangerous.” Tuesday’s incident marks the third such disruption in eight days. A similar device halted the Atlanta Dream’s July 29 game against the Golden State Valkyries, and another was tossed during the Chicago Sky’s Aug. 2 contest. In the Atlanta case, 23-year-old Delbert Carver was arrested on disorderly-conduct, indecent-exposure and trespassing charges; no arrests have been reported in the subsequent episodes. The league warned that any spectator who hurls objects will be ejected, face a minimum one-year ban and could be prosecuted. Arenas are tightening entry rules, with Los Angeles adopting a temporary “no-bag” policy while security reviews footage to identify the latest offender. Cunningham and other players have urged fans to stop the practice, citing risks to player safety and the game’s integrity.