In the high-stakes world of professional sports, pressure can forge diamonds or cause pipes to burst. For Indiana Fever’s Sophie Cunningham, the last few weeks have felt like a relentless stress test. Between facing down her old team, navigating a bizarre on-court incident, and calling out what she perceives as biased officiating, the outspoken guard has been living at the heart of the storm. Opening up on her podcast, Show Me Something, with co-host West Wilson, Cunningham gave fans an unfiltered look into a career chapter defined by conflict, controversy, and a stubborn refusal to back down.

It all started with a trip back to a familiar place that felt anything but welcoming. When the Fever traveled to play the Phoenix Mercury, it wasn’t just another game for Cunningham; it was a reunion charged with underlying tension. On a previous podcast, she had alluded to thinking her former organization could have “handled” certain situations “more professional.” While she kept the specifics vague, the message was apparently received loud and clear in the Mercury locker room.

WNBA: Sex toy thrown near Indiana's Sophie Cunningham in game

“Do you think that was because of what you said last week?” Wilson asked, referring to the palpable on-court friction.

“Hell yeah. A thousand percent,” Cunningham confirmed without hesitation. She explained that while she was polite in her original critique, her words had undeniably stirred the pot. “I could have been way meaner, right?” she reasoned, suggesting she had merely scratched the surface. The result was a game that felt personal. Cunningham described the initial reception from the Phoenix fans as warm, complete with a nice intro video and cheers. But that all changed the moment she started to heat up.

“Once I started to get like hit a couple threes and kind of got a little chippy, then I started getting some boos,” she recounted. Far from being offended, Cunningham embraced the villain role. “I’m okay with boos. I think that that’s competitive. That’s fun. Like that’s what gets me riled up.” In her view, some athletes are “too soft” for that kind of environment, but for her, it’s the lifeblood of competition. She went home, hit some threes, and, in her own words, was “talking all [shit].” Even though her team lost by three, she felt she had made her point.

Fever's Sophie Cunningham Is Fined Again for Comments on Her Podcast

This intense showdown was just one piece of a much larger, more challenging puzzle for the Indiana Fever. The team was suddenly thrown into crisis mode when they lost both their starting and backup point guards to devastating injuries in the same game. One suffered a broken foot “out of nowhere,” while the other tore her ACL. In an instant, the team’s backcourt was decimated, and in the ensuing chaos, a new floor general had to be found. That responsibility fell squarely on the shoulders of Sophie Cunningham.

Suddenly, a player known for her shooting and wing play was tasked with bringing the ball up the court against the world’s best defenders. When Wilson asked about her “bag” at the top of the key, Cunningham was brutally honest about her new role. “Very simple,” she said. “Keep it simple and keep it clean. Do nothing that is too crazy.” Her game plan? “I’m either getting a screen or I’m pushing off of you. I’m either fouling or someone’s helping me get open.” It’s a self-aware, survivalist mentality born of necessity. She admitted that if a team presses her full-court, she has no problem handing the ball off to her bigs, who she trusts to handle it. It’s a “point guard by committee” approach, and while she’s gaining confidence, it’s a trial by fire in a league that shows no mercy.

Paige Bueckers scores 34 in final home game, UConn tops SDSU 91-57 to reach  31st straight Sweet 16 | AP News

That pressure cooker boiled over in a recent heart-wrenching one-point loss. The opponent featured one of the league’s brightest new talents, Paige Bueckers, and by the end of the night, Cunningham was left fuming—not at the rookie, but at the officials. She made it clear that while she respects Bueckers’ talent, she felt the game wasn’t called fairly.

“I love Paige to death. Do not get me wrong. I think she’s a hell of a player and would love to play with her one day,” Cunningham prefaced, before dropping a bombshell. “But those refs were giving her every freaking whistle last night. Like you literally couldn’t touch her. Couldn’t touch her. And that that shit is so annoying to me.”

Her frustration was rooted in a perceived inconsistency. “If you’re going to do that, then give it to our guards,” she argued. She believes that while Bueckers is destined for greatness, a rookie shouldn’t receive that level of preferential treatment from officials. “When whistles are player focused, that’s like a huge problem,” she stated, voicing a sentiment many athletes share in private but rarely declare so publicly. “She’s a rookie. She shouldn’t get whistles as a rookie… to get the treatment she got last night was crazy.”

As if the injuries, the beef with her old team, and the officiating controversies weren’t enough, Cunningham has also had to deal with one of the most bizarre on-court distractions imaginable. During a game against Los Angeles, as she stood at the free-throw line, an object hit her foot. She looked down and was shocked to see a dildo lying on the court.

“It like scared me. I like jumped up,” she recalled, laughing about it after the fact. The moment was so surreal that it completely broke her focus, even drawing the attention of her coach, who was trying to get her head back in the game. What was initially just a shocking and absurd moment took another strange turn when it was rumored that the incident was a “crypto prank.” According to the rumor, a company that orchestrates public pranks was hired to throw the object to draw attention to a cryptocurrency. Whether true or not, it appeared to inspire copycats. “That’s when other people just started doing it for like fun,” Cunningham lamented. “I’m like, dang. Like throw a Big Mac. Throw something that is more fun. Not a dildo.”

Through it all, the podcast provides an escape and a platform for Cunningham to be herself. The banter with Wilson, from his travel nightmares returning from a wedding in Italy to their “Fine or Fined” segment debating celebrity news, showcases a personality that is as engaging off the court as she is fiery on it. Even a lighthearted story about teammate Caitlin Clark trolling her online about swimsuit brand deals—”Swimsuit brands, please comment focus on basketball,” Clark wrote—serves as a reminder of the camaraderie that helps her navigate the professional grind.

Yet, the core of her recent experience remains one of battle. She is an athlete in the trenches, fighting for her injury-riddled team, taking on a new and difficult role, and refusing to stay silent in the face of what she sees as injustice. Sophie Cunningham is not one to shy away from a fight, whether it’s with an old rival, a referee, or the bizarre circumstances of modern sports fandom. As the season wears on, one thing is certain: wherever she goes, drama and discussion are sure to follow.