But here's the thing: it goes in.
And in a league — and a city — obsessed with aesthetics and optimization, there's something deeply satisfying about a player who just... makes it work. Sowah's shot is a middle finger to the idea that everything has to look perfect to be effective. Silicon Valley could learn something.
The Valkyries are still building their identity as the Bay Area's newest professional franchise, and players like Sowah are exactly the kind of story that earns a fanbase. Nobody falls in love with a team because every player has a cookie-cutter jumper. You fall in love with the weird ones — the players who make you lean forward on your couch and say, "Wait, how did that go in?"
San Francisco has always been a city that celebrates doing things differently. We launched entire industries out of garages, we put sourdough in everything, and we somehow convinced the world that paying $7 for toast was reasonable. An unorthodox jump shot fits right in.
What matters at the end of the day isn't whether your form looks pretty in a slow-motion replay. It's whether the ball goes through the hoop. Sowah's does. And as the Valkyries fight to establish themselves in a crowded Bay Area sports market, they need players who give fans a reason to watch — and talk.
Mission accomplished on that front. Keep shooting, Miela. The aesthetics police can take a seat.

