Stunning revelation! Sophie Cunningham has finally broken her silence, bluntly calling out DeWanna Bonner for abruptly leaving the Indiana Fever without so much as a goodbye. Cunningham’s candid, unfiltered response only intensifies the simmering tension spreading throughout the league—what really happened behind closed doors will leave you stunned.

Sophie Cunningham Calls Out DeWanna Bonner Over Fever Exit: “Be Professional About It. Send a Text to Your Teammates”
Sophie Cunningham isn’t one to hold back—and she’s certainly not staying silent about DeWanna Bonner’s controversial exit from the Indiana Fever.
Bonner, a 6-time WNBA All-Star and longtime veteran, made headlines earlier this season when news broke that she had finalized her transition out of Indiana. What shocked many was how quietly—and quickly—it all happened. No farewell post. No public goodbye. Just a sudden disappearance from Fever operations, followed by a new chapter elsewhere.
That silence didn’t sit well with Cunningham.
“Look, I get it. Moves happen. Players switch teams. But there’s a right way to do it,” she said. “We all go to battle together, we all share that locker room. The least you can do is say something. A message, a call, anything. It’s about respect.”
Supporters of Bonner argue that she has the right to make personal and professional decisions on her own terms—and that players, especially women athletes, shouldn’t always be expected to explain themselves. Others believe that in a team-first sport like basketball, the way you leave matters just as much as the impact you had while you were there.
Cunningham, known for her fiery playing style and outspoken demeanor, is no stranger to controversy herself. But her comments here have drawn a wave of support online from fans who say she’s simply asking for common courtesy.
“It’s not about drama,” one fan wrote on X (formerly Twitter). “Sophie is saying what a lot of teammates wish they could say. You don’t just ghost a team.”

Another user echoed the sentiment: “If you’ve been in a locker room, you know how deep those bonds can run. A text takes 30 seconds.”The Fever organization, for their part, has remained quiet on the matter. And Bonner has not publicly responded to Cunningham’s remarks.
As for Cunningham, she’s not backing down. In a follow-up interview, she made it clear that her comments weren’t about creating tension—they were about accountability.
“We all want this league to grow. We want more eyes on us, more respect, more money,” she said. “That means holding ourselves to a standard. That starts with how we treat each other.”
It’s a powerful statement in a league where emotions run high and relationships are everything. Whether or not Bonner addresses the controversy, the conversation sparked by Cunningham isn’t likely to go away anytime soon.