@2shiftyly: #basketball #fypシ゚viral #fypシ #xyzbca #kevinporterjr

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Region: US
Sunday 15 March 2026 18:26:27 GMT
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ho0pist
Matas :
Ts song a relic
2026-03-15 18:30:11
20
imjuslame4
imjuslame4 :
My reaction when he got traded to the rockets
2026-03-23 13:35:52
6
trulyxzen2
trulyxzen2 :
It was lowk dumb trading him to rockets
2026-03-15 18:32:00
2
fuller.lucas
️ :
Loop is too clean
2026-04-23 14:27:27
0
what_sin
♱ :
2026-05-09 03:18:30
0
t.ogashi
富樫 :
fye
2026-04-27 02:35:18
0
luke.routhier
Luke :
Miss this era for him
2026-03-15 22:03:42
2
ballplayerr3
シ :
🖤
2026-03-21 14:50:28
1
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🏀 Every league has a first. The WNBA had Sheryl Swoopes. When the WNBA signed its first player in 1996, it wasn’t just launching a new league—it was making a statement. Sheryl Swoopes became the face of a new era for women’s basketball, setting the standard for excellence before the first tip-off ever took place. Already an Olympic gold medalist and NCAA champion, Swoopes brought instant credibility to the league. She went on to become a four-time WNBA champion, three-time league MVP, six-time All-Star, and one of the greatest two-way players the game has ever seen. But her legacy started with one signature that helped turn a dream into reality. Being the first meant carrying expectations, pressure, and the responsibility of proving that women’s professional basketball belonged on the biggest stage.  Swoopes embraced that challenge and helped build a foundation that generations of stars—from Lisa Leslie and Diana Taurasi to Candace Parker, A’ja Wilson, Breanna Stewart, Caitlin Clark, and countless others—continue to build upon. Nearly three decades later, the WNBA is experiencing unprecedented growth, sold-out arenas, and global attention. That success didn’t happen overnight. It was built by pioneers like Sheryl Swoopes, who believed in the league before the rest of the world did. 🏀 The first signature. The first star. A legacy that helped shape the future of women’s basketball forever. 🎥: wnba/TT #SherylSwoopes #WNBA #WomensBasketball #BasketballHistory #GameChanger
🏀 Every league has a first. The WNBA had Sheryl Swoopes. When the WNBA signed its first player in 1996, it wasn’t just launching a new league—it was making a statement. Sheryl Swoopes became the face of a new era for women’s basketball, setting the standard for excellence before the first tip-off ever took place. Already an Olympic gold medalist and NCAA champion, Swoopes brought instant credibility to the league. She went on to become a four-time WNBA champion, three-time league MVP, six-time All-Star, and one of the greatest two-way players the game has ever seen. But her legacy started with one signature that helped turn a dream into reality. Being the first meant carrying expectations, pressure, and the responsibility of proving that women’s professional basketball belonged on the biggest stage. Swoopes embraced that challenge and helped build a foundation that generations of stars—from Lisa Leslie and Diana Taurasi to Candace Parker, A’ja Wilson, Breanna Stewart, Caitlin Clark, and countless others—continue to build upon. Nearly three decades later, the WNBA is experiencing unprecedented growth, sold-out arenas, and global attention. That success didn’t happen overnight. It was built by pioneers like Sheryl Swoopes, who believed in the league before the rest of the world did. 🏀 The first signature. The first star. A legacy that helped shape the future of women’s basketball forever. 🎥: wnba/TT #SherylSwoopes #WNBA #WomensBasketball #BasketballHistory #GameChanger

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