Angel Reese Called Quinn Ewers and Ja Morant On Their Hypocrisy: Know The Details

The coverage of Texas quarterback Quinn Ewers’s text and Ja Morant’s recent celebration have been called out for their hypocrisy by LSU standout Angel Reese.

The Memphis Grizzlies standout Mornat did the same gesture of spreading his arms in excitement last week in the NBA, and Ewers did the same at the most recent Sugar Bowl.

 

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Morant is a person who attracts a lot of attention, most of it bad. Many believed that the Grizzlies star was making a gun motion during the celebration.

After serving a 25-game suspension for flashing a pistol in an Instagram video for the second time, he recently made his way back into the game.

 

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Despite being one of LSU’s greatest players, Reese was recently involved in her own scandal due to her inexplicable absence from the squad.

Angel Reese has firsthand experience with it.

 

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During the NCAA title game in April, she also got into a brawl with Iowa’s Caitlin Clark during a celebration. She also replied to a picture that contrasted the reactions of the Barstool X account to Ewers and Morant.

The website posted tweets such as “Quinn Ewers is having fun,” with “Ja spraying imaginary bullets into section 113 after the slam.”

Reese commented on X, “Lol i’ve seen this before.”

In the aforementioned incident, Reese was seen taunting Clark in the final game. She mimicked Clark’s “you can’t see me” hand signal from the Elite Eight, and after LSU won the national championship, she pointed to her ring finger.

Stephen A. Smith of ESPN claimed that it had something to do with race because she faced a great deal of criticism for it.

 

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“We all know that there’s a white/black issue here, because the fact of the matter is when Caitlin did it people were celebrating it, and they were talking about nothing but her greatness,” Smith said on “First Take” in April after the title game.

“But then the second a sister stepped up, and threw it back in her face, now you’ve got half the basketball world saying, [in a mocking tone], ‘Well, that’s not the classiest thing to do.’ It was the exact same thing!”