Living the Dream: Atlanta Dream players take a stand against their owner

Written By: Jackie Rae

WNBA players have been at the forefront of social justice movements in sports for quite some time. Players were among the first, in 2016, to wear "Black Lives Matter" warm-up shirts before games to address several incidents of police violence against Black men and women. The Atlanta Dream, however, shifted its activism inward to address racism within its organization. 


Following reports that the WNBA planned to paint Black Lives Matter on their courts during the 2020 Wubble, the Dream's primary owner and then Georgia Senator Kelly Loeffler, wrote a letter to WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert criticizing the league's embrace of the movement.


Loeffler didn't just stop at writing a letter. She shared her views on Fox News, an outlet that typically pushes an anti-Black narrative. She boldly and proudly called Black Lives Matter "divisive" and "Marxist." Given the movement was sparked as a result of the racist ideology that has and continues to plague police departments around the country, leading to repeated police brutality and murders of Black citizens, as well as the league being predominately Black, it was impossible to view her statements as anything other than hateful.


WNBA players quickly condemned Loeffler's stance, and later that month, the league dedicated the season to Breonna Taylor, the Louisville, Kentucky, medical worker killed by police in a botched raid of her home. A move that was simply not enough for the Dream.


On August 4, 2021, Dream and Phoenix Mercury players appeared on national television wearing black shirts with an all-caps message, written in white font, on the front: VOTE WARNOCK. Players across the WNBA started wearing the same shirts, and the "Vote Warnock" message spread on social media. Elizabeth Williams, who now plays for the Chicago Sky but was a forward for the Atlanta Dream then, recalls some public confusion about the shirts. "People were like, what is a Warnock?" she says.

Fans nationwide quickly learned that Rev. Raphael Warnock was a democratic incumbent running against Senator Kelly Loeffler.  This move was not just about pushing the Dream's primary owner out of ownership. This was about the Dream pushing the devil out of Georgia -- or at least Gateway Center Arena in College Park, Georgia. 


On January 5, Rev. Raphael Warnock won his runoff election against the incumbent and became Georgia's first Black Senator. Warnock's victory, combined with Democrat Jon Ossoff's win against incumbent Republican Senator David Perdue in the other runoff race, flipped Georgia blue and now gives Democrats control of the Senate in addition to their majority in the House and White House win.


Several factors contributed to Warnock's win. Barack Obama's endorsement indeed helped, and his criminal justice reform message resonated with voters. However, Angele Delevoye, a PhD candidate in political science and quantitative methods at Yale, has also concluded through data analysis that the WNBA played a role in Warnock's ascension. "The WNBA helped generate momentum," she says. "The WNBA has a long history of activism. So the players were ready for this moment."


Dream shooting guard Tiffany Hayes, who has since moved on to the Las Vegas Aces agrees. "We were definitely the loudest voice," says Hayes. "We were the sternest voice. And we backed what we said. I don't see any other hand that was bigger."


Loeffler's anti-Black Lives Matter stance angered many WNBA players, around 70% of whom are Black. So much so that the WNBA payers union tweeted, "E-N-O-U-G-H! O-U-T!" Former Atlanta Dream guard Renee Montgomery, who opted out of playing the 2020 season to focus on social justice reform, wrote on Twitter: "I'm pretty sad to see that my team ownership is not supportive of the movement and all that it stands for. I was already sitting out this season, and this is an example of why. I would love to have a conversation with you about the matter if you're down?" (They never spoke.) "I've been around her, and it just never came across my mind that this was who I was working for, so to speak," says Hayes. "So it was kind of disappointing, kind of sad to learn something like that. And I knew right away that I wasn't with it."


The Dream players met on Zoom. "There was a lot of frustration," says Williams. "We had a lot of free agents this year, so for them, it was, 'O.K., I came to this new team, and this is the first thing I have to deal with?' There was a lot of emotion. It wasn't an easy conversation to have."


The Dream players, however, resolved to respond positively. "I think there was that level of determination, like all right, at the end of the day we are strong women who are professional athletes, and we're going to do our job and continue to inspire through our play and we're also going to use our voices off the court," says Williams. "So despite the frustration and disappointment and all that, we still wanted to make sure that we were intentional about our words and our actions that would follow."


"Just being on that call, I knew some good things were going to happen," says Montgomery. "Just talking to the players, hearing how passionate they were about making sure their voices were heard." The Dream players released a short team statement on July 10, three days after Loeffler's letter went public. "Our team is united in the Movement for Black Lives," it read, in part. "It is not extreme to demand change after centuries of inequality. This is not a political statement. This is a statement of humanity. Black lives matter."


As the summer progressed, however, players began to believe that Loeffler was playing politics. Her attacks on the progressive WNBA played to Georgia's conservative base—and could steal votes away from her Republican opponent in the special election, former Republican Congressman Doug Collins. Loeffler could also cas

t calls for her removal as Dream owner as a symptom of "cancel culture" intolerant of opposing views.

"It was like, 'oh s–t,'" said retired Seattle Storm point guard Sue Bird. "The more we fight her—people were asking, 'Should she be an owner?'— the more we were basically calling for her head, the more it was just playing into her hands. She got to show the state of Georgia, 'Oh, look at me, I am standing up to these people and telling them to keep politics out of sports.' It was ironic that this woman was saying, 'Keep politics out of sports,' when she was actually using us as a political pawn."


Bird and other players decided to shift their focus from Loeffler to Warnock. "We recognized in our work with the Say Her Name movement, there's power in saying Breonna Taylor's name," says Williams. "And so you can do the opposite and not say someone's name. We kind of embraced that and haven't shied away from that since."


They consulted with Stacey Abrams, a member of the WNBA Players' Association's board of advocates who vouched for Warnock. On two Zoom calls—one involving the executive committee of the union, the other open to all players—the players vetted Warnock. "After that, players were like, 'O.K., this guy's legit,'" says Williams. "He was so confident, saying that 'even if I don't win in November, I am going to win in January."


That's exactly what happened: Warnock failed to receive the requisite vote in the November 3 general election—more than 50%—to avoid a runoff but prevailed over Loeffler in January 50.8% to 49.2%. "He supported all the things that we supported as it related to criminal justice reform, women's health, reproductive rights all these things that we had talked about as WNBA players," says Williams. "And so once players liked him, we were like, 'How do we show our support?'"


Bird suggested that players wear "Vote Warnock" T-shirts before games. She texted Montgomery about the plans, which took Montgomery by surprise. "So the shirts are going to say what now?" Montgomery recalls saying. "And she was like, 'The shirts are going to say, 'Vote Warnock,'" and I'm like, 'Whoa, that is big lit.' That's all I could say. That is lit."


Montgomery was excited but was also apprehensive. "There's always that stigma of 'stick to sports,' 'shut up and dribble.' And we're not talking about just going against maybe a sponsor of the team or someone that's like a little bit connected to the team. We're literally talking about a team owner," Montgomery says. "So there was a power dynamic there where she is my boss and you just know that people that have money have a lot of connections. And you could end up being blackballed and not even know what happened."


Many people, however, have embraced the WNBA's activism. Long before the dawn of Catilin Clark, who brings problematic fans with her, viewership rose 68% going into the WNBA Finals. Players worked to increase voter turnout and recruit poll workers for the general election in Georgia. They posted about the elections on social media. Hayes helped host a voter registration event at the gym she owns in Atlanta. Williams worked a phone bank. Montgomery talked to students throughout the state, explaining the importance of the Georgia runoff to the country's future.


Ironically, the Atlanta Dream was up for sale before the Dream, and the rest of the league called for Loeffler to sell. Once players made it known they wanted her gone, she did everything she could to delay the sale, seemingly for no other reason than to be a thorn of disgust for the team. Even more disappointing, Commissioner Cathy Engelbert said the league would not force Loeffler to sell her stake but also that her comments did not align with the league's progressive values. Really?

Eventually, the Dream won again.  The team was sold to an ownership group led by two real estate executives and a former star player for the team — Renee Montgomery.


While the faces of the team that proved that athletes and teams can use their voices to affect positive change for themselves and the world around them have changed, their message is the same.


AN INJUSTICE ANYWHERE IS AN INJUSTICE EVERYWHERE

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