The Chicago Skyâs practice facility was a place of echoesâsneakers squeaking, balls thumping, voices rising and falling. But lately, there was a different kind of noise swirling around the team. Headlines. Hot takes. Social media storms. And at the center of it all was Angel Reese.
Angel had arrived in Chicago with the fanfare of a champion. She was fresh off a dazzling college career, her name on every lips, her face on billboards, her signature already inked on a major shoe deal. The city, and much of the basketball world, expected her to be the next big thingânot just for the Sky, but for the WNBA itself.
But the reality was more complicated.

Candace Parker, the legend herself, watched from the sidelines with a mixture of pride, concern, and frustration. Sheâd seen hype before. Sheâd lived it. But she also knew the difference between being a star and being a superstar. And that difference, she believed, was measured in sweat, sacrifice, and the quiet work no one ever saw.
One afternoon, as the Sky wrapped up a sluggish practice, Candace lingered by the baseline. She watched Angel, who was laughing with teammates, posing for a selfie, her phone always close at hand. There was an ease about herâsome might say an entitlement. Candace wondered if that came from the constant praise, the relentless spotlight, or simply the knowledge that she was the franchiseâs chosen face.
Tyler Marsh, the new head coach, approached Candace. He looked tired, his eyes shadowed by the weight of expectations. âSheâs got talent,â he said quietly, nodding toward Angel. âBut sometimes I feel like Iâm coaching a brand, not a player.â
Candace didnât sugarcoat her response. âYouâre not wrong. The media made her a superstar before she played a single pro game. Thatâs not her fault, but itâs not helping her grow, either.â
Tyler sighed. âI try to push her, but sheâs surrounded by people telling her sheâs already arrived. Itâs hard to get through.â
Candace thought back to her own rookie days. There had been pressure, sure, but nothing like this. Social media hadnât been a force yet. Endorsements came after you proved yourself, not before.
That evening, Candace joined a podcast to discuss the state of the league. Inevitably, the conversation turned to Angel Reese.
âIf you were her coach, what would you tell her to focus on?â the host asked.
Candace was blunt. âFirst, Iâd tell her to block out the noise. Focus on the fundamentalsâher footwork, her shot, her defense. Sheâs got a great coach in Tyler Marsh, but you canât coach someone who thinks theyâve already made it. The media created a pseudo-star, not a superstar. Thereâs a difference.â
The host pressed her. âPseudo-star?â
âYeah. Pseudo means false, fake. Itâs when someone appears to be the real deal but hasnât done the work yet. Angelâs got potential, but potential isnât the same as production. She needs to earn it on the court.â

The clip went viral overnight. Fans argued in comment sections. Some defended Angel, saying she was young, that sheâd grow into her role. Others echoed Candaceâs critique, blaming the organization and the league for putting too much on Angelâs shoulders too soon.
Inside the Skyâs locker room, the mood was tense. Angel saw the headlines, read the comments. She tried to laugh them off, but the words stung. Sheâd always been confidentâsome said cockyâbut now she felt exposed. Was she really a âfakeâ superstar? Was everyone just waiting for her to fail?
She looked to her teammates for support, but the chemistry wasnât there. Veterans grumbled about her attitude. Rookies envied her endorsements. Tyler Marsh tried to rally the team, but every loss made the whispers louder.
One night, after a particularly brutal defeat, Angel stayed late in the gym. For once, there were no cameras, no fans. Just the sound of her own breathing and the steady bounce of the ball. She shot free throws until her arms ached, replaying Candaceâs words in her mind.
Candace found her there, alone in the empty gym. She didnât say anything at first, just rebounded for Angel, passing the ball back over and over.
Finally, Angel broke the silence. âYou think Iâm a fake.â
Candace shook her head. âI think youâre listening to the wrong people. Youâve got talent, Angel. But talent isnât enough. The league doesnât care about your followers or your shoe deal. Out there, all that matters is the work. The grind.â
Angelâs voice trembled. âI feel like everyoneâs waiting for me to mess up.â
Candace softened. âMaybe they are. But you get to decide what happens next. You can keep chasing the spotlight, or you can chase greatness. Itâs up to you.â
Angel nodded, wiping sweat from her brow. For the first time, she felt the weight of her own expectationsânot the ones piled on by the media, but the ones she set for herself.
The next day, Angel showed up early to practice. She listened to Tyler, asked questions, stayed late to work on her defense. It wasnât a dramatic transformation, but it was a start. The veterans noticed. Slowly, the teamâs energy shifted.
The Sky didnât suddenly become champions. They still lost games, still faced criticism. But Angelâs attitude changed. She stopped talking about endorsements and started talking about rebounds, assists, hustle. She let her game speak for her.
Months passed. The noise died down. Angel wasnât the leagueâs biggest star, but she was becoming something better: a real teammate, a real competitor. Candace watched with quiet pride as Angel grew into her roleânot a pseudo-star, but a player willing to work for everything she wanted.
In the end, the truth about superstardom wasnât about hype or headlines. It was about heart. And that, Candace knew, was something no one could fake.