NEWNow you can listen to Pak Gazette articles!
Indiana’s fever, Sophie Cunningham, is gelifying quite well with her new teammates this season, and her attire prior to the game before Sunday’s confrontation against Las Vegas Aces demonstrates that point.
His shirt, in particular, had a fairly shameless message from how tight he is with a certain duo.
Cunningham, who has recently seen his popularity in the WNBA to grow after defending Caitlin Clark on the court against the Connecticut sun, put on a shirt with herself, Clark and her companion of guardian Lexie Hull with the words “three milks” also printed.
CLICK HERE for more sports coverage at Foxnews.com

Sophie Cunningham, #8 of Indiana’s fever, arrives at the Arena before the match against Las Vegas Aces on June 22, 2025 at the T-Mobile Arena in Las Vegas. (Jeff Bottari/NBAE through Getty Images)
“Three milks” translates from Spanish to “three milks”, as we said, a fairly shameless message from Cunningham.
However, in the spirit of athletes who show their support and bind with teammates, Cunningham leaves any reason to doubt how much he loves his women in the costumes on and off the court.
He was also doing it with his words recently, while talking to journalists burningly about having to physically defend Clark last Tuesday against Sun’s players. He called the WNBA already his referees to “not protect” Clark.
Sophie Cunningham calls the WNBA referees for not protecting Caitlin Clark after starting fighting to protect her
He got into a physical altercation with Jacy Sheldon after the latter attacked Clark in the eye, which quickly led to a skirmish when Marina Mabrey put the current rookie of the WNBA year in the hard wood.
Cunningham, Sheldon and Sun Lindsay Allen’s guard were expelled from the game with about 40 seconds after Cunningham committed a foul to Sheldon under the basket at a fast break.
“During that, it was only part of the game,” Cunningham told journalists. “I think the referees had a lot to do with that. It was an accumulation for a couple of years of them simply not protecting the star player from the WNBA. At the end of the day, I will protect my teammates. That is what I do.”

From left to right, the Indiana fever guard, Lexie Hull, #10, the Indiana fever guard, Caitlin Clark, #22, and the Indiana fever guard, Sophie Cunningham, #8, laugh near the team bank on Tuesday, June 3, 2025 during a game between Indian Indianapolis. (IMAGN)
Last season, while Clark was breaking rookie and league records, there was a lot of debate about whether the league was protecting her on the court, since the teams became very physical with her to potentially interrupt her game.
Since Cunningham joined the fever this season, he has been vocal even on the sidelines when Clark or any of his teammates are cursing. In addition, when it was recorded in the game, Cunningham will surely pass between anyone who is playing with their teammates, as is evident during the incidents with Clark.
As a result of being a good teammate of one of the faces of the League, the popularity of Cunningham has shot himself, and that is shown in his followers on social networks. He had less than 400,000 followers on Tiktok before last Tuesday’s game against The Sun. Now it has 1.3 million and counts on that platform.
On Instagram, the number was more than 300,000, and now it is more than 839,000.

Indiana’s injured fever guard, Sophie Cunningham, #8, on the left, and Caitlin Clark guard, #22, reacts from the bank during the first half of a WNBA game against the Chicago sky in United Center. (Images of Kamil Krzaczynski-Imagn)
If Cunningham was not yet shown as the “executor” of fever enough, he has the credentials to support it, since it is a black belt in Taekwondo.
However, Cunningham and fever want to win games and make a physical statement when necessary. The consecutive games have fallen now after losing to the Aces on Sunday, when he had nine points, six rebounds and an assistance for 24 minutes.