Lisa Leslie Is Still an All-WNBA First Team Dresser

Lisa Leslie Is Still an All-WNBA First Team Dresser


When Lisa Leslie signed on to play in the WNBA’s inaugural season in 1997, there was no “tunnel” in the way the word is used now. Sure, the original eight teams arrived to games through technical tunnels underneath their respective arenas, but that’s all they were. Today, the WNBA tunnel is something entirely different, and it has played a significant role in the growth of the league. When Skylar Diggins arrives in Seattle wearing Off-White, it matters. When Paige Bueckers wears Coach in the tunnel, it matters. Even the New York Liberty’s head coach, Sandy Brondello, is dressed in Kallmeyer—by Daniella Kallmeyer herself—and yes, it matters. What happens on the court is important, but fashion in the WNBA is not insignificant. It’s part of why brands like Off-White, Coach, and Kallmeyer now partner with the league in some way, shape, or form, bringing their audiences and offering opportunities for players to become known for more than just basketball.

Leslie understood all of this early on in her career. “If there was a tunnel walk [in the WNBA], I could probably think of about two or three players who would have been dressed to walk it,” she said when I sat down with her at Café Kallmeyer in July during the 2025 WNBA All-Star weekend in Indianapolis. “Everybody else would have been like, ‘How do you get around this and go around the back?'” According to the Hall of Famer, though, having a platform like the tunnel to express herself would have sparked something inside her. It would be “like you’re being seen,” she explained. Back then, when she would get dressed up for games and other WNBA events, people would constantly ask her where she was going. They never even considered that looking good could lead to playing well, a now-popular mantra of sorts that Leslie reminded me was coined by football legend Deion Sanders. While it didn’t make sense to most people in and around the league, what’s now referred to as a tunnel ‘fit always clicked in her mind. “The dichotomy of playing basketball and being able to transform and change into beautiful clothes—it’s like heaven to me,” she said.

(Image credit: Lisa Blumenfeld/NBAE/Getty Images; Noah Graham/NBAE via Getty Images)

For Leslie, being identified only as a basketball player was never the goal. “I didn’t want anybody to look at me and go, ‘Oh, you’re a basketball player, right?’ I feel like that’s just low-hanging fruit,” she explained. “You’re putting me in a box.” Wearing a suit and heels allowed her to show off another side of herself that had nothing to do with the game she’d been playing since she was a little girl—with the boys, I might add.