dwyane wade candace parker.JPG
"What when they don't appreciate your worth looks like," Wade tweeted. "I'm happy for my friend [Candace Parker]… but LA Sparks that's your legacy."
Kyle Terada-USA TODAY Sports
  • Candace Parker is headed home to Chicago after 13 years with the Los Angeles Sparks.
  • Chicago native Dwyane Wade applauded the WNBA superstar’s free agency moves on Twitter before lambasting the Sparks for letting her go.
  • The retired NBA star said this is “what when they don’t appreciate your worth looks like” before telling her longtime franchise: “that’s your legacy.”
  • Visit Insider’s homepage for more stories.

WNBA free agency doesn’t begin until February 1, but explosive drama has already taken hold of the league.

Candace Parker – the WNBA’s reigning defensive player of the year and a two-time league MVP – is leaving the Los Angeles Sparks after 13 seasons to join her hometown Chicago Sky.

And Dwyane Wade had something to say about it.

candace parker
Candace Parker.
AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack

After news of Parker’s free agency move broke Wednesday night, the future NBA Hall of Famer and Chicago native congratulated his TNT broadcast teammate for heading back to The Windy City. He also absolutely lambasted the Sparks for letting their superstar walk away without a hard fight.

“What when they don’t appreciate your worth looks like,” Wade tweeted. “I’m happy for my friend and teammate that she’s going back HOME!!!”

"But @LASparks no that's your legacy," he added.

 

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Candace Parker (left) attacks Alyssa Thomas during their 2020 WNBA playoff matchup.
Reinhold Matay-USA TODAY Sports

Though Parker's departure from Los Angeles is unquestionably jarring to WNBA fans, those who have followed the Sparks in recent years may not be entirely surprised by her decision to leave. Parker had a decidedly rocky relationship with Derek Fisher, who became head coach of the franchise in 2018 and was promoted to General Manager in December of 2020, ever since his first postseason at the helm.

Fisher benched Parker for most of the team's 2019 WNBA semifinals elimination game against the Connecticut Sun. When she came out for the final time in the third quarter of the contest, Parker was caught on camera angrily questioning, "Why would you do that now?!"

Los Angeles lost 78-56 and was eliminated from the playoffs. The following year, the No. 7 Sun upset the third-seeded Sparks - this time in a single-elimination second-round game - in what would prove to be Parker's last contest in purple and gold.

The 6-foot-4 forward led Los Angeles to its first championship in more than a decade in 2016. She earned Finals MVP honors in the Sparks' five-game battle against Maya Moore's Minnesota Lynx for the title.

Parker accumulated five WNBA All-Star nods and six All-WNBA first-team selections during her time in Los Angeles. The Sparks made the playoffs in all but two seasons in her 13 years with the franchise.

Parker now joins a deep Chicago squad complete with three 2019 All-Stars - Courtney Vandersloot, Allie Quigley, and Diamond DeShields - on its roster. With the 2019 WNBA Coach of the Year in James Wade at the helm, the Sky have become a favorite to win it all in 2021.

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Courtney Vandersloot has led the WNBA in assists in each of the past three seasons, and four of the past six.
AP Photo/John Bazemore

And that's Parker's main objective as she reaches the twilight of her career.

"I'm all about championships," Parker told Insider back in December. "Individual awards - those can be disputed. Finals MVPs and championships, those can't be disputed. I've won two in high school, two in college, and I've gotten one in the pros."

"Honestly, I would be lying to you if I didn't tell you that I wake up every day and think about winning another championship."

Read the original article on Insider