LSU’s Angel Reese has highest women’s college basketball NIL value

Angel Reese has officially become the face of women’s college basketball.

After leading LSU to a national championship victory over Caitlyn Clark and Iowa — and the ensuing media hubub — the star forward saw her NIL valuation skyrocket to $1.3 million, according to On3 Sports.

She’s now the highest valued player in women’s college basketball and third highest among all female college athletes, only behind gymnasts Olivia Dunne and Sunisa Lee.

She is also ranked No. 13 on On3’s NIL 100 list, ranking ahead of LSU quarterback Jayden Daniels.

Before her team’s title run in the NCAA Tournament this year, Reese was at $371,000 in NIL valuation.

Fast forward a month and the “Bayou Barbie” tripled her social media following to 3.6 million as well as gaining $480,000 in NIL value.


Reese transferred to LSU from Maryland after the 2021-22 season
NCAA Photos via Getty Images

Her title game antics — giving Clark the John Cena “You can’t see me” hand gesture — helped raise her exposure, as the continued conversation about brash, unapologetic ways.

She quickly capitalized, selling merchandise on her website and getting NIL deals with Calvin Klein, Bose and Coach.

“All year I was critiqued about who I was,” Reese said after adding NCAA champion to her resume. “I don’t fit the narrative. I don’t fit in a box that y’all want me to be in. I’m too hood. I’m too ghetto. Y’all told me that all year. But when other people do it, y’all say nothing.


LSU's Angel Reese waves her hand in front of her face during LSU's Women's Basketball National Championship Celebration
Reese went viral for using the “You can’t see me” gesture during the national championship game.
Jonathan Mailhes/CSM/Shutterstock

“So this was for the girls that look like me, that’s going to speak up on what they believe in. It’s unapologetically you. That’s (who) I did it for tonight. It was bigger than me tonight. It was bigger than me.”

Reese, who is only a sophomore and will play collegiate ball for at least one more year, averaged 23 points and 15.4 rebounds this past season.

As soon as the confetti rained onto the court at after the championship game, Reese knew exactly what her future held.

“The price just went up,” Reese exclaimed.

She wasn’t wrong.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

LSU women’s players would rather visit Obamas, not Bidens

LSU women’s basketball star Angel Reese has lashed out again at first lady Jill Biden, saying she and her teammates would rather celebrate their NCAA championship with the Obamas than at the White House.

Reese criticized President Biden’s wife Tuesday for initially extending public invites to both LSU and Iowa, the team the Tigers beat 102-85 in Sunday’s championship game. A rep for the first lady later walked back the offer to the Hawkeyes.

“I’m not gonna lie to you, I don’t accept the apology,” Reese said on the “Paper Route” podcast. “You said what you said … And like, you can’t go back on certain things that you say.”

“They can have that spotlight,” Reese, the Final Four’s Most Outstanding Player, said of the invitation for Iowa. “We’ll go to the Obamas. We’ll see Michelle, we’ll see Barack.”

LSU guard Alexis Morris agreed with her teammate.


President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama in the White House
Getty Images

“Michelle OBAMA can we (LSU NATIONAL CHAMPS) come celebrate our win at your house ?” she tweeted Monday.

“Mrs.Obama made sure we had healthy snacks when I was in middle school, I still eat BAKED HOT CHEETOS !” Morris joked later on Twitter. “Come on auntie Michelle.”

Though Tigers coach Kim Mulkey has said the team would accept the White House invitation typically offered championship winners, Reese said on the podcast, “We’re gonna see. I don’t know.”


The LSU Tigers defeated the Iowa Hawkeyes 102-85 in the NCAA tournament.
Getty Images

First Lady Jill Biden and President Biden have walked back an invite for Iowa.
Getty Images

LSU guard Alexis Morris said she also wanted to visit the Obamas instead of the Bidens.
Boston Globe via Getty Images

No runner-up team has ever been invited to the White House.
REUTERS

“I just know that if the roles were reversed, it wouldn’t be the same,” Reese went on. “If we were to lose, we would not be getting invited to the White House.”

Jill Biden had offered the Hawkeyes the equivalent of a participation trophy during an event in Denver Monday — the day after she watched LSU beat Iowa for the championship in Dallas.

“I know we’ll have the champions come to the White House; we always do,” she said. “So, we hope LSU will come, but, you know, I’m going to tell Joe I think Iowa should come too, because they played such a good game … So winners and losers, That’s sportsmanship. That’s good sportsmanship.”

Reese later tweeted out a story about the first lady’s remarks, calling them “A JOKE” and sharing three rolling-on-the-floor-laughing emojis. 

On her podcast appearance, Reese said she took the first lady’s reference to “sportsmanship” as a dig at her for taunting Iowa star Caitlin Clark in the game’s final minute.

“I remember she made a comment about [how] both teams should be invited because of sportsmanship. And I’m like, ‘Are you saying that because of what I did?’” Reese said. “Stuff like that, it bothers me because you are a woman at the end of the day. White, black, it doesn’t matter, you’re a woman, you’re supposed to be standing behind us before anything.”


“I’m going to tell Joe I think Iowa should come too,” Jill Biden said on Monday.
Getty Images

Angel Reese took the invitation as a slight following her viral taunting moment with Caitlin Clark.
USA TODAY Sports via Reuters Con

President Biden indicated Tuesday that only LSU would be invited to the White House.
USA TODAY Sports via Reuters Con

NCAA runner-up teams have never been invited to the White House, though winning teams have been regular guests since at least the Reagan administration.

A spokeswoman for Jill Biden later indicated that only the Tigers would be offered a White House appearance.

“The First Lady loved watching the NCAA women’s basketball championship game alongside young student athletes and admires how far women have advanced in sports since the passing of Title IX,” the first lady’s press secretary, Vanessa Valdivia, tweeted.

“Her comments in Colorado were intended to applaud the historic game and all women athletes. She looks forward to celebrating the LSU Tigers on their championship win at the White House,” Valdivia added.

Joe Biden said in a separate statement that both LSU and men’s NCAA basketball champion UConn would be greeted at the executive mansion, saying Americans “can all learn a lot from watching these champions compete.”



Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Hawkeyes will win national title

Iowa shocked the college basketball world when it halted South Carolina’s undefeated run to clinch a spot in Sunday’s national championship game.

And it’s hard to imagine betting against the Hawkeyes in the final.

Caitlin Clark was brilliant in Friday’s 77-73 semifinal win over the top-seeded Gamecocks, scoring or assisting on 75 percent of Iowa’s points to spark the team’s first win in the Final Four.

That’s nothing new for the Wooden Award winner, who ranks third in scoring (27.7 PPG) and first in assists (8.6 APG) across the entire season.

She’s upped those totals in the tournament, averaging 32.2 points and 10.4 assists en route to five Hawkeyes wins — with the first four coming by an average of 21 points.

That includes back-to-back 41-point efforts for Clark against two of the best teams in the country.

LSU deserves credit for its path to the title game, too, but Kim Mulkey’s group simply hasn’t been as dominant nor as battle-tested to this point.

The Tigers faced just two ranked opponents before the NCAA Tournament, which included a 24-point loss to the very South Carolina team that Iowa beat on Friday.

They also nearly lost to Utah in the Sweet 16 and trailed Virginia Tech by nine in the fourth quarter before rallying to set up Sunday’s showdown.

Betting on College Basketball?

LSU will have a size advantage in the final, but Iowa was the smaller team against South Carolina, too.

It didn’t matter with Clark’s sheer brilliance on display, and I’d expect a similar showing in this one.

The play: Iowa -3.5.

Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

LSU gymnast Olivia Dunne unveils Halloween costume

LSU gymnast Olivia Dunne gave her social media followers an early Halloween treat over the weekend.

The 20-year-old athlete unveiled her Halloween costume on Sunday, pairing a black corset and leather mini skirt with black angel wings and fishnet stockings.

“Welcome to the dark side,” Dunne captioned the photos on Instagram.

LSU gymnast Olivia Dunne shows off her Halloween costume.

The athlete posted the photos Sunday on Instagram.

Olivia Dunne captioned the shots, “Welcome to the dark side.”

Elsewhere on TikTok, where the New Jersey native boasts over six million followers, she posted a video of herself in the Halloween getup.

Dunne’s Halloween-centric posts come days after she shared a candid look at the life of a Division I athete, revealing how her so-called “off days” are typically jam-packed.

Dunne began the day in question with a 5:30 a.m. wake-up call as she was instructed to be at substance testing a half-hour later. From there, she joined her teammates at a local Starbucks.

Later in the morning, Dunne headed to the stadium for treatement on her torn labrum.

“The grind don’t stop,” Dunne posted at the time.

October has been a busy month for Dunne, who was recently crowned one of the most influential athletes.

LSU gymnast Olivia Dunne poses in February 2022 photo.

The New Jersey native boasts more than six million followers on TikTok.

On3 Sports, a company that focuses on college sports digital media, data and marketing, ranked Dunne at the top of their list of female NIL moneymakers, valuing athletes by performance, influence, and exposure.

Dunne is valued at $2.3 million, according to On3 Sports, followed by Olympic gymnast Suni Lee at $1.5 million and UConn star point guard Paige Buckers at $816,000.



Check out our Latest News and Follow us at Facebook

Original Source

Exit mobile version