Olivia Miles walked the WNBA draft’s orange carpet in a bold getup. She wore a black zipper jacket over a white t-shirt and a black tie. She paired her top with black trousers, boots and wore her hair in a bun.
The WNBA’s X account shared a video featuring all the top players from the draft on their timeline. Miles was standing beside her peers on the stage as the media personnel clicked their pictures.
Some fans were not impressed with Miles’ outfit. They swarmed the post’s comments section with their opinions.
“Olivia Miles dressed like a damn security guard,” one fan commented.
“I’m crying Olivia miles looks regular af 😭😂” another fan said.
“Olivia Miles came dressed like hank from the office,” another fan commented.
Here are more reactions:
“This Is Why I F**k With Olivia, son 😂👏🏾😂👏🏾😂👏🏾 Not too much on Draft Day, I Like It💯” one fan said.
“Olivia so annoying lol,” another fan commented.
“Somebody said Olivia look like the uber driver wtf 😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭” another fan said.
Miles is one of the top prospects in this year’s WNBA draft. She averaged 19.6 points, 7.2 rebounds and 6.6 assists per game on 48.1% shooting in the 2025-26 NCAA season.
Olivia Miles joins Unrivaled ahead of the WNBA draft
Olivia Miles is one of the top prospects to get drafted as the first pick in the 2026 WNBA draft on Monday, alongside Azzi Fudd and Awa Fam. The TCU Horned Frog guard is taking huge strides following the completion of her collegiate basketball career.
The TCU standout did not wait for her name to be called out on draft day to become a professional. Miles joined Unrivaled and will play professionally for one of the clubs in the 3-on-3 basketball league’s third season.
“After I did the Future is Unrivaled… this seemed like a style of play I could adjust to well and something I wanted to be a part of as a piece of women’s basketball history,” Miles told ESPN ahead of the draft.
Miles had originally signed an NIL deal with Unrivaled as the league’s first Future is Unrivaled class, a project designed to work with the next generation of female basketball players in a 3-on-3 format. Azzi Fudd, Flau’Jae Johnson, and Lauren Betts were among the other notable names in the program.
Edited by Avi Shravan










