Twitter was buzzing about Friday’s release of Drake’s highly anticipated sixth album, “Certified Lover Boy,” and Ayesha Curry was a big part of that conversation.

That’s because Curry, 33, was held up as the ideal wife on one of the artist’s tracks, though it’s definitely not the first time that the wife of Steph Curry has been celebrated for having certain feminine qualities that are considered desirable.

In the song  “Race My Mind.” Drake laments being enamored of a hard-drinking woman who seems more interested in dancing all night, showing off her “cakes” to other men and coming home intoxicated.

“You too saucy, too flossy, you moved in and moved off me,” he raps. Instead, Drake says that if he’s going to get serious, he wants to hold out for someone like Ayesha Curry, the wife of the Golden State Warriors star.

“How I’m supposed to wife it? You not Ayesha enough,” he raps. “You love getting T’d up/
Love showin’ the cakes, you know that they eat it up.”

With separate social media posts, Ayesha and Steph Curry took delight in Drake’s new album, though they didn’t specifically address the artist’s shoutout to Ayesha. Drake has long enjoyed a good relationship with Warriors stars, and at one time sported a Kevin Durant Jersey at a concert.

The cookbook author, lifestyle entrepreneur, Cover Girl and mother of three took to Instagram Stories to share Drake’s track list, which also includes songs featuring Jay-Z, Travis Scott, Lil Wayne, Rick Ross, Kid Cudi and more. Before the album dropped early Friday, Steph re-tweeted a promotional tweet by Drake, and wrote “Congrats Bro!”

This isn’t the first time that Ayesha Curry has been swept up in a social media conversation about being a certain kind of feminine ideal.

Back in 2016, Curry was the subject of a feud, not of her own making, that compared her reputation to that of Oakland R&B singer Kehlani. At the time, Kehlani was embroiled in scandalous allegations that she had cheated on another NBA star, Kyrie Irving, her then-boyfriend at the time.

In the social media feud, Curry was unwittingly portrayed as “the poster child for a sort of idealized, new age Stepford wife,” a Daily Beast writer said.

“A devout Christian, she’s attractive and respectable, celebrating her life as a wife and mother, while also advocating for modest dress and ‘classier’ standards,” writer Stereo Williams said.

Another writer, Joseph Milford of Elite Daily, similarly said that any time the topic of a woman’s behavior becomes “the subject du jour on Twitter — particularly when that conversation largely involves women of color — Ayesha Curry gets thrown into the mix.”

That’s because, he said, Curry is “widely thought of as the ideal woman to be in a relationship with in a world where there are so few prominent examples of famous women who are just that.”

Drake’s new song seems to depict her as that kind of desirable woman. And, after the album dropped, fans had something to say about the name-drop and immediately jumped on Twitter.

According to E! News, one person used a term for a man who likes to sleep around to joke: “‘You not Ayesha enough’ is about to be the (expletive) boy caption of the year.”

Someone else quipped that Drake probably got permission to use Ayesha’s name, but also joked that the permission came from Steph, as if he if he is the owner of his wife’s reputation.

And still others complimented Curry for being married to Ayesha Curry, reverting to that archaic tendency of praising a man for his wife’s qualities or accomplishments. Someone in fact praised Steph Curry as the “Goat,” because he has such a desirable wife: