“Call Me Angel Reese”: Sophie Cunningham’s Playful Comment Proves the Reese Effect Is Real 💫

When Phoenix Mercury guard Sophie Cunningham sat down for what was supposed to be a lighthearted offseason interview, nobody expected her to make headlines. The Missouri native, known for her hustle, humor, and fire on the court, was chatting casually about her diet changes, her training routine, and how she’s preparing her body for what she calls “the most important WNBA season yet.”
Then came the moment that stopped the internet.
“I guess I’m gonna turn into a Victoria’s Secret model… Call me Angel Reese,” Sophie said with a laugh.
It was a throwaway joke, sure. But within hours, it became the quote heard around women’s basketball — because it wasn’t shade, and it wasn’t random. It was respect.
The Joke That Spoke Volumes
For fans who’ve followed the league closely, Sophie’s comment landed differently. It wasn’t just a punchline — it was a reflection of how much Angel Reese’s name has transcended the game itself.
The 22-year-old Chicago Sky forward made history earlier this year when she became the first professional athlete ever to walk in the Victoria’s Secret Fashion Show. In doing so, Reese shattered yet another glass ceiling — not only for women’s basketball players but for all athletes who’ve been told to “stay in their lane.”
Her walk down that glittering runway wasn’t just about fashion. It was about power, confidence, and change. And for Sophie Cunningham — one of the WNBA’s most authentic voices — to joke about “turning into a Victoria’s Secret model” was her way of tipping her cap.
“That’s the thing about Angel,” one Mercury teammate later said on social media. “You can’t even mention her name without talking about what she’s done for the culture. That’s real impact.”
The Reese Effect
There’s a phrase that’s been floating around sports and social media circles lately: The Reese Effect.
It’s what happens when a player’s influence spills beyond the scoreboard — when their charisma, confidence, and unapologetic style inspire something bigger than basketball.
And Angel Reese embodies it perfectly.
From her days at LSU, where she led the Tigers to a national championship and became a symbol of new-age swagger, to her WNBA debut, Reese has turned every stage she steps on into a statement. Whether she’s diving for rebounds, clapping back at critics, or front-row at a fashion event, she does it all with the same energy: bold, brilliant, and unapologetically herself.
Brands have noticed. So have fans. So has the world.
In just one year as a pro, Angel Reese has landed partnerships with Reebok, Beats by Dre, and Mielle Organics, appeared on the cover of Sports Illustrated and Teen Vogue, and built a social media following that rivals entire NBA rosters. Her runway debut with Victoria’s Secret was simply the latest chapter in a story that’s still being written.
Sophie’s Salute
Sophie Cunningham’s shout-out was more than a laugh line. It was a sign that the rest of the league is watching — and learning.
Cunningham, who’s built a reputation as one of the WNBA’s most fiery competitors, has always balanced her edge with humor. But she also understands brand power. Like many players, she’s seen firsthand how women in sports have to do twice the work to get half the visibility.
So when she said “Call me Angel Reese,” it came with admiration — the kind that only players who know the grind can give.
“I love that,” a fan commented on X (formerly Twitter). “That’s not competition. That’s sisterhood. That’s one woman athlete seeing another one winning — and cheering her on.”
In a league where the athletes are not just playing for points but for respect, this kind of mutual acknowledgment means everything. It shows that what Reese has done isn’t isolating — it’s inspiring.
From Baltimore Dreams to Global Icons
It’s wild to think that just a few years ago, Angel Reese was a college star with dreams of going pro. Now she’s sitting front row at New York Fashion Week, shaking hands with icons, and rewriting what it means to be an athlete in the modern era.
Her journey — from Baltimore gyms to national TV to the world’s biggest fashion stage — has become the blueprint for the next generation.
:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(749x0:751x2)/Angel-Reese-2025-Victorias-Secret-Fashion-Show-101525-628e11f1e1a744ce8f86b9d09b5b27d2.jpg)
“Angel opened the door for so many of us,” one young WNBA rookie told ESPN recently. “She showed that we can be more than players. We can be entrepreneurs, models, leaders — all of it.”
Even Reese herself has said it best:
“I’m not just a basketball player. I’m a brand. I’m a woman who can do it all — and look good doing it.”
Why the World Is Watching
It’s not just basketball fans who are paying attention. The entire sports world is watching the transformation of women’s athletics — and Angel Reese is at the center of it.
In an era when athletes are reclaiming their narratives, Reese has mastered the art of self-definition. She’s turned criticism into confidence, spotlight into strategy, and opportunity into empire.
Her influence has helped fuel record-breaking WNBA ratings, sold-out arenas, and viral moments that dominate every corner of the internet.
When another athlete like Sophie Cunningham drops her name in conversation, it’s not just flattery — it’s proof of influence. Angel has become a measuring stick for what success looks like in 2025.
She’s not just part of the game; she’s shaping it.
The Power of Representation
Representation matters — and Angel Reese represents more than just herself. She represents the Black women who’ve been underappreciated in sports, the athletes who’ve been told to tone down their confidence, and the dreamers who believe you can dominate the court and the catwalk in the same lifetime.
And when players like Sophie Cunningham — who come from entirely different backgrounds and play on different teams — join in the celebration, it shows that Angel’s story transcends rivalry.
This is bigger than the WNBA. It’s about women athletes across every sport recognizing their worth, seizing their power, and refusing to fit into someone else’s definition of success.
What Comes Next
As for Sophie Cunningham, her offseason grind continues. The Mercury guard has hinted that she’s working on “something fun” off the court too — maybe a podcast, maybe a fashion collaboration. And with the 2025 WNBA season on the horizon, she’s clearly more motivated than ever.
As for Angel Reese? She’s only just getting started.
Between her growing list of endorsements, fashion features, and her ever-expanding influence, she’s redefining what it means to be a modern athlete — powerful, glamorous, and unstoppable.
So when Sophie said, “Call me Angel Reese,” it might’ve been a joke… but it also might’ve been a prediction.
Because in today’s WNBA, every player wants a piece of that glow — the confidence, the crossover appeal, the ability to be everything at once.
And if that’s the standard? The league — and the world — are all better for it.