These are clearly not spheres. So why do measurements indicate ionic 'radii' of high-spin compounds are larger than their low-spin counterparts? Picture a octahedral high-spin compound. All d-orbitals would be occupied by electron (imagine all the above orbitals on set of axes).
The corresponding low-spin compound would only have out of orbitals occupied, so (depending on your frame of reference) the and would be unoccupied. This implies the low-spin electrons are confined to a somewhat smaller space, giving a smaller measured radius. Again, please remember this is an oversimplification and better left to the quantum physicists to explain.
Sources: Periodic Trends in Ionic Radii, Spin states (d electrons)
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