Santa Fe New Mexican

Player takes break to open ice cream shop

The Dream’s McCoughtry looking past her playing days

- By Malika Andrews

ATLANTA — Some profession­al athletes (hello, Roger Federer) try to preserve their bodies by skipping a few competitio­ns. Others, like many baseball and basketball players, take a seat on the bench a little more often late in the season if the games are inconseque­ntial.

Then there is Angel McCoughtry, one of the top scorers in the WNBA. At 30, her body was signaling that it needed a break, so she devised what might be the most novel approach yet by a profession­al athlete looking to extend a career. She stepped away from her sport for a season and opened an ice cream parlor.

McCoughtry’s Ice Cream in Atlanta occupies a storefront on Peters Street next to a popcorn shop and two doors down from Old Lady Gang, a restaurant owned by Real Housewives of Atlanta star Kandi Burruss. McCoughtry’s already seems to have a following. WNBA players have come in for scoops, and rapper Killer Mike visited one recent afternoon.

“My body was speaking to me,” McCoughtry said about her decision to leave the WNBA for a season. “I was always tight. I was always mentally drained from playing all year round. I had plantar fasciitis. It was tough and I knew that it was time to recover if I wanted longevity in my career.”

It is rare for any athlete to willingly step away from a sport. It is even rarer for an athlete who is thriving on the court. McCoughtry was a dominant college player at Louisville and was the first overall pick in the 2009 WNBA draft. She was fourth in the league in scoring last year for the Atlanta Dream and earned about $115,000.

She has played overseas every offseason since leaving college, adding several months of physical exertion to the three-month WNBA season.

The ice cream shop, she said, is her “happy place.” The color scheme is Tiffany blue, and the walls are adorned with life-size cutouts of McCoughtry holding ice cream cones.

Flavors rotate. Recent offerings included Salty Bae, a salted caramel and chocolate variety dedicated to Turkish chef Nusret Gokce, who recently rose to prominence as an internet meme; and Space Jam, a blueberry cheesecake ode to the 1996 movie starring Michael Jordan.

“Tomorrow, we can eat broccoli, but today is for ice cream!” a sign outside reads.

McCoughtry had considered opening a hookah lounge that served desserts after she discovered during her time playing in Turkey that hookah was a communal activity. But she figured the hookah culture in Atlanta did not promote the same kind of inclusivit­y. Also, she doesn’t smoke.

But McCoughtry has a sweet tooth. At dinner recently at Seasons 52, an upscale restaurant in the Buckhead neighborho­od of Atlanta, the waiter brought her a glass of Jam Jar Moscato. It wasn’t sweet enough. She wanted the most confection­ary wine they carried. She was satisfied with a syrupy dessert riesling that tasted more like honey than wine.

A store that sold sugar (ice cream) was a better fit than the hookah lounge.

McCoughtry’s only frustratio­n, she said, was that the WNBA has not promoted her venture.

“If you go look on the WNBA page, I don’t think you’ll see me and the ice cream shop,” she said. “Why not? I’ve done so much for the league. Why am I not on there? Why haven’t you guys posted something about the ice cream shop? Is it because I’m sitting out? Who cares? I’m getting rest. Give me something. Nothing else against the league or the WNBA, but you guys have to promote us and what we’re doing to show people she’s doing something in her community.”

 ?? MELISSA GOLDEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Angel McCoughtry, one of the top scorers in the WNBA, at McCoughtry’s Ice Cream in Atlanta.
MELISSA GOLDEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES Angel McCoughtry, one of the top scorers in the WNBA, at McCoughtry’s Ice Cream in Atlanta.

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