NewsNBA

TCU’s Bella Cravens’ Photos Go Viral After College Basketball Fight

TCU’s Bella Cravens’ Photos Go Viral After College Basketball Fight

TCU and George Washington squared off on Monday night in more ways than one.

Although women’s college basketball is obviously always a must-see event, this particular outing stole the headlines for something especially salacious.

It all began when TCU forward, Bella Cravens, became angry with George Washington’s Essence Brown over pulling her hair.

From there, all hell broke loose:

With social media being what it is nowadays, reactions to the incident poured in immediately:

As a result of her newfound popularity from this fight, Cravens’ social media accounts became extremely highly-trafficked over the past 24 hours.

A number of her photos, for obvious reasons, went mega-viral:

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Bella Cravens (@becravens)

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Bella Cravens (@becravens)

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Bella Cravens (@becravens)

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Bella Cravens (@becravens)

This has been a crazy year for college sports. Between college football girlfriends causing a stir with their racy photos, a fan getting so angry about Texas losing that she stripped her clothes off and various cheerleaders going viral – it has been one thing after another.

TCU, specifically, has been a controversy magnet over the past few days.

In some ways, this most recent incident is just par for the course.

How will Cravens ultimately opt to use her newfound celebrity going forward?

Time will tell.

Related: NBA Fan Uses Lana Rhoades Sign To Troll Celtics’ Blake Griffin

Carlos Garcia

A longtime sports reporter, Carlos Garcia has written about some of the biggest and most notable athletic events of the last 5 years. He has been credentialed to cover MLS, NBA and MLB games all over the United States. His work has been published on Fox Sports, Bleacher Report, AOL and the Washington Post.
Back to top button