ANGEL REESE hilariously hit back at her haters by filing for a special trademark.
The Chicago Sky star has uniquely acknowledged criticism of her game and the “mebounds” term used.

Angel Reese is trying to trademark the word ‘mebounds’[/caption]
It comes after Reese was criticised amid a feud with Caitlin Clark[/caption]
WNBA fans who do not like her have being throwing around the word to suggest she is only useful for rebounds.
But Reese is taking the taunts in her stride and has trademarked it.
The claim has been filed in her home town of Maryland and it is set to cover clothing like tees, sweatshirts and hats with the phrase printed on it.
Reese said in a TikTok video: “Whoever came up with the ‘mebounds’ thing, y’all at that up because ‘mebounds’, rebounds, crebounds… anything that comes off that board, it’s mine.
“And a brand? That’s six figures right there.
“The trolling? I love when y’all do it because the ideas be good.
“When y’all have to alter my face because I’m cute, alright, whatever. That doesn’t get me.
“But when y’all came up with ‘mebounds’ because statistically, all the rebounds that I get aren’t always just mine. They’re, like, the defenses, too, or somebody else on my team.
“But, when ya’ll came up with ‘mebounds,’ y’all ate.”
Fans loved the move, with one saying: “She kinda cooked the trolls ngl.”
The trademark is pending and is yet to be approved by the authorities.
Reese leads the WNBA a whopping 11.9 rebounds per game.
And she has formed a rivalry with the division’s other leading figure Caitlin Clark.
The pair clashed during Chicago Sky’s match-up with the Indiana Fever last month.
The former LSU star grabbed an offensive board and was fouled hard by Clark.
Reese was knocked to the ground and the ball squirmed out of her hands.
She was furious as she got back to her feet, and had to be restrained from confronting Clark by her Sky team-mates.
The feud saw Reese at the centre of controversy after posting a snap of her rival alongside the caption: “White gyal running from the fade.”
Reese was then supposedly targeted by racial slurs and the WNBA launched an investigation.