Why Did Angel Reese Announce Her WNBA Draft Eligibility in Vogue?

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Athletes like Ms. Reese and Serena Williams know that fashion is now part of the game.

L.S.U. may have lost to Iowa in the Elite Eight round of the N.C.A.A. women’s basketball tournament, but even two days afterward their star forward Angel Reese was still making headlines — this time in Vogue.

On Wednesday, Ms. Reese, 21, decided to use the glossy to announce she was forgoing her last year of college to enter the W.N.B.A. draft, taking place later this month. That choice, complete with Ms. Reese posing glamorously for a shoot involving clothes from Valentino, Diesel, Wales Bonner and Christian Louboutin, is simply the latest expression of the blossoming love affair between fashion and sports, an intermingling of industries that will reach new heights this summer with the Paris Olympics.

The basketball player said she had been inspired by Serena Williams, who chose to use Vogue to announce her retirement from tennis. (Ms. Williams got a cover shoot, befitting her status.) Most likely, however, Ms. Reese is modeling — no pun intended — her career on Ms. Williams’s in more ways than just one.

After all, as a college athlete, Ms. Reese — who was called the “Bayou Barbie” after she moved to Baton Rouge because of her penchant for eyelash extensions, long pink nails and dressing up — has been one of the highest paid N.I.L. stars, with deals valued at $1.8 million. She has 2.7 million followers on Instagram, where photos of herself in uniform alternate with photos of herself in outfits from Fashion Nova and with Louis Vuitton purses. Both data points matter in the same way that the record-breaking 12.3 million people that watched the L.S.U.-Iowa game matter. Ms. Reese clearly understands the power of image to transform a talented athlete into a brand that can then be parlayed into all sorts of deals, not only during her playing career, but far beyond.

Ms. Reese’s N.I.L. deals, or those involving her “name, image and likeness,” have been valued at $1.8 million.Myles Loftin/Vogue

It is not an accident, for example, that Tom Brady, in his post-football life, started the “Brady” line of athleisure, or that a large chunk of Michael Jordan’s wealth comes from his Air Jordan sneaker line. Nor that Ms. Williams herself has a fashion line, S by Serena. Nor that seemingly every week brings a new announcement from LVMH, one of the Olympic sponsors, about a different athlete who has become an ambassador for one of its brands, including Christian Dior and Louis Vuitton.

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