"Most people compliment me on maintaining my femininity while I'm on the court. People like the fact that I model. My fans or little girls always say they want to play sports, but also want to be a model like me and I think that's great"
About this Quote
Lisa Leslie is describing a double audition that female athletes have long been forced to pass: excellence in the game, plus reassurance that they still read as conventionally feminine. On its face, the line is upbeat - a star hearing compliments, enjoying modeling, feeling proud that girls see more than one path. Underneath, it exposes how rarely women get to be evaluated on performance alone. No one tells an NBA center they did a good job "maintaining masculinity" while boxing out; the compliment itself is a cultural tell.
The intent is strategic as much as personal. Leslie came up in an era when the WNBA was still fighting for oxygen and mainstream sponsors were more comfortable selling female athletes as palatable, glamorous, non-threatening. Modeling becomes both armor and access: a way to expand marketability, pull in endorsements, and widen the audience that might otherwise dismiss women's basketball. When she says "people like the fact that I model", she's naming an economy of approval.
The "little girls" detail is where the quote tries to reclaim agency. Leslie frames femininity not as a leash but as range - you can want the jump shot and the runway. It's a genuinely generous vision, but it also reflects the tightrope women in sports walk: empowerment often arrives packaged in the same beauty standards that restrict it. The line works because it celebrates possibility while inadvertently documenting the bargain that made that possibility legible to the public.
The intent is strategic as much as personal. Leslie came up in an era when the WNBA was still fighting for oxygen and mainstream sponsors were more comfortable selling female athletes as palatable, glamorous, non-threatening. Modeling becomes both armor and access: a way to expand marketability, pull in endorsements, and widen the audience that might otherwise dismiss women's basketball. When she says "people like the fact that I model", she's naming an economy of approval.
The "little girls" detail is where the quote tries to reclaim agency. Leslie frames femininity not as a leash but as range - you can want the jump shot and the runway. It's a genuinely generous vision, but it also reflects the tightrope women in sports walk: empowerment often arrives packaged in the same beauty standards that restrict it. The line works because it celebrates possibility while inadvertently documenting the bargain that made that possibility legible to the public.
Quote Details
| Topic | Sports |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
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