She looked like a star ready to take over the league as she strolled on the orange carpet, posing for photographs before the WNBA draft in a sparkly black dress, befitting her self-proclaimed moniker "Bayou Barbie."
That wasn’t the case two weeks ago after a defeat to Iowa in the NCAA Tournament when Reese broke down crying and said she had a challenging year. This included being benched early in the season and missing four other games for reasons that still have not been explained.
But she did address the perception that she was a villain.
“I don’t really get to speak out on things just because I try to ignore and I just try to stand strong. I would still sit here and say, ‘I’m unapologetically me.’ I’m going to always leave that mark and be who I am and stand on that,” Reese said after that Iowa loss.
Undeterred, Reese again put together an excellent season, averaging 18.6 points and 13.4 rebounds per game and winning the SEC Player of the Year award.
The Chicago Sky drafted the LSU star with the No. 7 pick in the WNBA draft and she says she lives by the motto, “Every day the sun don’t shine, that’s why I love tomorrow."
And with the increased eyeballs on the league this year because of her and some of her contemporaries (including one whose last name is Clark), Reese is more than ready for the spotlight.
“We need to market around that,” WNBA commissioner Cathy Englebert said before Monday’s draft.
Before the draft, Reese said it didn’t matter to her where she got drafted but she hoped to go into the right fit and a chance to showcase her skills, which included 61 double-doubles in the past two seasons.
The Sky is coached by Hall of Famer Teresa Weatherspoon, who was coached by LSU's Kim Mulkey when she was an assistant at Louisiana Tech.
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