Ice Cube is bringing the pitch directly to the people, and the message couldn’t be simpler.
The BIG3 founder dropped a quote on the league’s Instagram this week: “Own a piece of the game.” Bloomberg ran with it to a wider business audience. The call is clear – the 3-on-3 circuit Cube helped build is now actively courting outside investors for ownership stakes.
This feels like a real moment for the league. BIG3 has been building since 2017. Cube and co-founder Jeff Kwatinetz didn’t throw this thing together on a whim. They set out to create a genuine home for post-NBA talent – players with competitive skills and no major league stage left to play on. What they built is a touring league with real structure and real stakes. Names like Clyde Drexler and Charles Oakley have been part of the operation. That’s not celebrity decoration. That’s basketball credibility you can’t manufacture.
Now they’re opening the door to new owners.
Bloomberg picking this up matters. Major business media amplifying a sports league’s investor pitch changes who’s listening. BIG3 isn’t just reaching basketball fans now. It’s talking to people who evaluate sports franchises as financial opportunities.
“Own a piece of the game” lands differently in that room. Sports ownership has always been reserved for a small group of extremely wealthy people. Most folks spend their whole lives watching teams they love with no realistic shot at a real stake in them. Cube’s framing speaks directly to that. He’s pitching access, not exclusivity.
That’s very much on-brand for Ice Cube. From Compton to N.W.A. to Hollywood to the business world, he’s consistently built on his own terms and brought his community along. The BIG3 ownership push is another chapter in that same story.
The 3-on-3 format gives BIG3 a structural edge. The league runs on smaller rosters and a touring model instead of fixed markets. Games are fast by design. For a prospective investor, that leaner structure makes the entry point more realistic than buying into a traditional pro franchise.
The Instagram post drew over 4,700 likes. For a business pitch rather than a highlight reel or celebrity moment, that’s meaningful engagement. Real people interested in the league’s future are paying attention.
No specific terms or timeline were included in the post. Anyone seriously interested will need to look further for the full details. But the invitation is officially out there, and Cube’s name is on it.
He’s always found a way into every room he’s set his sights on. This pitch is him building the room himself.
