6’8 Wnba player liz cambage called Nigerian women “monkeys”

Ahadi

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She told Serge Ibaka she's half Nigerian, but she was raised white.. :mjpls:


Serge had her big ass on the ropes tho.
Probably piped after they wrapped up filming.. :ehh:


Serge is a good looking breh

:manny:

Wouldnt be surprised. He had Keri Hilson going crazy
 

3rdWorld

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Bullshyt story " he told me I shouldn't trust him either" GTFOH!

Not even.
I never had issues with Nigerians..he wasn't a c00n, was intelligent and he'd taken me in first job after college and really schooled me on game in the company and life. Id like to think we had mutual respect, and he saw i had no prejudice against Nigerians so it was his way of giving me a heads up..showing me how slick, uncouth and deceiving they could be as he could see I trusted him.
He told me a lot about Naija..wild shyt.
He did say Nigerians weren't always corrupt, and that the population explosion of the mid 1900s and military fukked the place.
 

BushidoBrown

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all i wanna know is, is wnba salary so low that this bish gotta subsidize her income with an only fans page? or is she just a THOT to the core? :patrice:
 

iBrowse

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iu
Yo that episode is wild :mjlol:
 

get these nets

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She said she never met her father and was raised entirely by her mother’s side of the family. As far as I’m concerned, she’s half black in genetics only and her harboring self hatred is a result of her upbringing.

Once we in general stop immediately claiming biracial people without knowing their upbringing/views, we’ll stop being a surprised and offended when they act like dikkheads.
Do you see any contradiction between that public stance, and your chosen avatar? Who appears to be a biracial woman.

12204.jpg
 

EA

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Do you see any contradiction between that public stance, and your chosen avatar? Who appears to be a biracial woman.

12204.jpg

No because me having Joyce Wrice as my avatar isn’t indicative of whether I consider her black or not (because I don’t, biracials should be allowed to claim their own identity). She’s my avatar because she’s one of my favourite singers and she’s attractive. If she started spewing anti-black nonsense then I’d change my avatar.
 

get these nets

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No because me having Joyce Wrice as my avatar isn’t indicative of whether I consider her black or not (because I don’t, biracials should be allowed to claim their own identity). She’s my avatar because she’s one of my favourite singers and she’s attractive. If she started spewing anti-black nonsense then I’d change my avatar.
It seems odd to me that you draw a line in the sand between Black and biracial, yet choose a biracial woman as your avatar.

CQhV-oFUYAAkHFy
 

get these nets

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Hey hey hey, GOOD BYE


July 28, 2022

Inside the Sparks’ ‘divorce’ from a four-time All-Star​

Liz Cambage is one of the biggest names in the WNBA—but her time in the league might be over.

The Sparks announced yesterday that they had agreed to a “contract divorce” with the Australian center, ending her brief tenure in Los Angeles. Cambage contributed to the Sparks this season (13.0 points and 6.4 rebounds per game), but it turns out this move wasn’t about her on-court performance.


Last night, Yahoo’s Chris Haynes reported that Cambage’s teammates had several issues with her, even before she was signed.

“Multiple players on the team felt the center could help the Sparks if she was focused and committed, but they expressed concerns that she’s known to be a player others don’t like to play with, sources said,” Haynes wrote.

Still, Derek Fisher, who was the Sparks’ coach and general manager until he was fired early last month, decided to sign the four-time All-Star.

The players’ concerns were proven to be well founded. There were issues with Cambage right from the start, Haynes reported. She wanted to wear the No. 1 jersey, which belonged to Amanda Zahui B., so Fisher asked Zahui B. if she would give Cambage the number. She declined. But Cambage continued to angle for the jersey number, so, Haynes reported, “Sources say management eventually made the call to give the number to the new starting center.”


Cambage got her way with the jersey number (and Zahui B. ended up not playing this season, anyway), but she still had other gripes. From Haynes’s report:

In film sessions, sources say it was customary for Cambage to call out teammates, accusing them of looking her off and not targeting her. Teammates would counter that she’s not sealing in the post and seldom gets back on defense when a turnover occurs. It was a conundrum that went unresolved.
There’s also the issue of Cambage’s reported use of slurs during a pre-Olympics scrimmage against Nigeria last summer. Cambage reportedly called the Nigerian players “monkeys” and told them to “go back to your third-world country.” Sisters Chiney and Nneka Ogwumike, who are of Nigerian descent and currently lobbying to be allowed to play for the Nigerian national team, were Cambage’s teammates with the Sparks.


The Sparks are clinging to a playoff spot at 12–15, tied for sixth in the league. There are currently six teams with between 10 and 12 wins vying for the final three spots in the eight-team playoff field. The team seemingly believes that Cambage’s presence was doing more harm than good and that cutting her loose can have a positive effect on the team. Given Cambage’s talent and significant role on the team (she was sixth in minutes played per game), cutting her in hopes of improving team chemistry is a gamble, but one the Sparks clearly believed was worth taking.

As for Cambage, Haynes reports that no WNBA teams are interested in signing her at the moment
 
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