âShe is absolutely losing her mind.â Forbes just dropped their 2025 âMost Powerful Women in Sportsâ list, and the results have sparked a massive firestorm.
đ¨Â âShe is absolutely losing her mind.â đą

Forbesâ 2025 Most Powerful Women in Sports list has ignited a full-scale online firestorm â and the debate is moving faster than the facts.
When Forbes released its latest rankings, one name instantly set social media ablaze: Sophie Cunningham. Cunningham didnât just appear on the list â she was reportedly slotted at #4, placed alongside billionaires, franchise owners, and global power brokers. For supporters, it felt like validation. For critics, it raised eyebrows. And for the internet? It was gasoline on an already raging fire.
Adding fuel to the conversation was the absence of Angel Reese, a player with enormous visibility, cultural reach, and fan engagement of her own. Within minutes, timelines filled with side-by-side comparisons, hot takes, and emotionally charged claims. Some posts framed the contrast as proof of a âpower shift.â Others went further, speculating about personal reactions â including unverified claims that Reese was âfurious.â
Hereâs where the conversation needs grounding.
There is no verified public statement from Angel Reese reacting angrily to the list. Any claims about her emotional response are speculation, amplified by the speed and sensationalism of social media. In an era where engagement rewards outrage, narratives can form long before facts are checked.
What is verifiable is the broader context driving the debate. Cunninghamâs reported earnings figure â often cited online as $8.1 million in her rookie year â reflects total income streams, not salary alone. That includes endorsements, sponsorships, appearances, and brand partnerships, which can dwarf base league pay for high-profile athletes. Fans pointing out that this figure far exceeds a standard WNBA salary are highlighting a real dynamic: off-court value is increasingly central to modern sports power.
But that doesnât automatically diminish other athletes.
Angel Reeseâs influence operates differently. Her brand strength, media presence, and cultural impact are widely recognized, even if they werenât reflected in this specific ranking. Lists like Forbesâ measure power through a particular lens â revenue, influence over institutions, business reach â not talent, popularity, or competitive fire. Absence from one list doesnât equate to irrelevance, just as presence doesnât crown a definitive hierarchy.
The phrase âjealousy pattern,â now circulating widely, says more about online culture than about the athletes themselves. Rivalries are easy to invent and hard to verify. They thrive in comment sections because they simplify complex careers into digestible conflict.
What this moment truly reveals is something bigger: womenâs sports has entered an era where financial data, brand leverage, and influence are scrutinized the way menâs sports have been for decades. That scrutiny brings opportunity â and controversy.
Cunninghamâs ranking, whether celebrated or questioned, signals how far the ecosystem has evolved. Reeseâs omission, whether temporary or structural, raises questions about how power is defined and who gets recognized by which metrics.
The real story isnât about one athlete being âfurious.â
Itâs about a system still learning how to measure womenâs influence â and a fanbase passionate enough to argue every decimal point.
And that, more than any ranking, is proof that womenâs sports power has arrived.