Looking very much like the team that won the 2009 WNBA championship, the Mercury jumped out of a 15 point lead, lost the lead, and continued to push the ball until the Lynx tired and melted away. Merc win 99-88.
One of the WNBA's brightest stars made her return to the court after almost a year-long absence following a torn ACL and abdominal surgery just weeks before the start of the 2010 season.
Augustus played a surprising 32 minutes in her return and at times showed flashes of that incredible mid-range game. She finished 6-for-13 from the field but had a stretch in the third quarter where she was 4-for-4 including a 3-point shot.
Asked if she expected to play that many minutes in her return Seimone said, "No not really. I'm just going with the flow of things, seeing what coach wanted and obviously she wanted me to play 32 minutes so I'm just going with the flow."
Despite being her first game in almost a year, Seimone was happy with her stamina. She reported a few stretches where the ball was going up and back without a stop that got her winded but for the most part she was able to recover and play.
Overall, Augustus agreed that the Mercury's up-tempo style of play took it's toll on a Lynx team that is off to a disappointing 2-8 start to the season. "When you're playing Phoenix you know it's an up and down game and it's just a stretch of getting back in transition and things that we didn't do."
"I think they made 14 3s tonight, that's a matter of getting back in transition and picking up and also putting the pressure on them, trying to run transition back on them. The tempo just kind of slowed down when we got the ball but Phoenix being a running team just kept running," she added.
Lynx Coach Cheryl Reeves said this about the return of her team's leader: "Honestly, I didn't think that she would be able to play 33 minutes against the Phoenix Mercury at the pace that we have to play when you play these guys. I was happy to have Seimone back out there and I thought she held her own."
Augustus was content with the way her team competed in this game compared to other losses and cited the need to find more chemistry on the court as a solution to their woes.
(Photo by Ryan Malone, SB Nation Arizona)
The Mercury got back to their running ways and dropped 99 points on the Minnesota Lynx. An impressive shooting performance from Diana Taurasi: 31 points on 10 of 18 shooting.
The Lynx were led by another impressive rookie performance from Monica Wright (21 points) and a great comeback from Siemone Augustus, who finished with 13 points in 32 minutes.
The last time Seimone Augustus played in a WNBA game, it was in Phoenix on June 17th, 2009. By all reports, she is set to return to the floor tonight, ironically, in Phoenix.
From the Star Tribune:
The Lynx got one major hole plugged when All-Star guard Seimone Augustus was cleared to play in Thursday's game at Phoenix. Augustus has been sidelined since last July, when she had season-ending surgery on her anterior cruciate ligament, and then had an abdominal surgery in May to remove three non-cancerous fibroids.
While the 2-7 Minnesota team is under-performing against preseason expectations, so are their hosts for tonight's game.
The Mercury are coming off a two-game road trip that started with a what Coach Gaines called a "barn beating" at the hands of the Seattle Storm, who are 8-1 and making quite a habit of winning. They are scary good right now.
Phoenix followed up that loss by falling just one point short against the LA Sparks. In three games between the Sparks and Mercury, the margin of victory is +1 for Phoenix. All three games were decided by one point. Wild.
Despite the road trip results and the two-games-under-.500 record (3-5), the Mercury have found reasons to be upbeat about where they are headed.
"For six minutes in that game (against LA), I saw our team," Gaines said at this morning's shootaround. "I feel good. I feel that we know what to do and we know how to do it now. Our training camp is over."
Specifically, he's talking about Candice Dupree adjusting and learning the Mercury system, along with the adjustment he's made to get her the ball on the move and in more pick and roll situations. Corey sounded very confident for a coach whose team has yet to play a solid game all season.
Penny Taylor agreed that things were looking up and was also pleased with the team's performance in LA. She talked about pushing the ball more through advance passes and shooting with confidence, but also touched on the team's attitude changing.
"Being sure to not expect it to happen and make it happen. I think we've, for whatever reason, just been expecting it to happen because it always has and we've had the right attitude throughout the past. And this time we've just got to make more of a focus on making sure we are making it happen and we're the ones out there getting the loose balls and we're the team boxing out and getting the rebounds instead of just expecting that it's just going to all happen for us."
Taylor talked about the fatigue she's felt coming off a long season overseas and wouldn't fully reject that there's any kind of championship hangover effect, but she also added, "It does feel so long ago, the championship; we've all played another season since then."
Mostly, in a very Steve Nash kind of way, Penny just wanted to talk about the attitude and mindset getting back to where it needs to be. Taylor and Nash share very similar approaches to the game. Both are very cerebral players who think and talk more about the intangibles and hard-to-describe sense of how a team is approaching the game with the right spirit and mentality. Both also happen to be extremely tough individuals who love to win but have a healthy perspective on the game.
Programming Note:
Tonight's game will be broadcast on Fox Sports Arizona with our own Kevin Ray calling the action.
Improved Mercury Spacing, Chemistry and Energy Fuel Victory
For the first time this season, the Mercury team I watched play looked like the Mercury team I saw last season. It was obvious from the jump that the Mercury were back to their old ways, pushing the ball, playing hard, and getting (and making) open looks.
Even when the the Lynx battled back from a 15-point 1st quarter deficit and built their own 8-point lead early in the 3rd quarter, there was never a sense that the Mercury were letting the game slip away.
Coach Gaines agreed, "That is a problem of a fast-break team, that happens a lot. If the other team gets on fire, they catch you ... I felt okay because how they got back in the game was they shot 21 free throws in the 2nd quarter. It wasn't 21, maybe it was 17."
It was 12, but his point stands. The Lynx 30-point 2nd quarter was as much about the Mercury missing open shots (2-8 from three) which led to transition attack and Mercury fouls. As Corey always says, his best defense is his offense. When his team scores and can get back and set their zone, they are an effective defensive unit.
Run them down
Despite being down, and despite some beautiful shots from rookie Monica Wright (21 points in 22 minutes), Phoenix kept pushing the pace and sure enough, right about the 6 minute mark of the 3rd, you could see the Lynx start to wear down. Of course, it helped me to also be sitting close enough to hear Minnesota Coach Cheryl Reeve imploring her team to move without the ball and get back in transition. They didn't.
"We made a decisive point to keep running it when they started to look tired. I think that Temeka (Johnson) did a great job of that," Penny Taylor said.
Johnson had 10 of the Mercury's 27 assists, along with 13 points, for the team's only double-double.
A couple of Lynx shots allowed them to hold their lead on the scoreboard, but it was pretty clear at that point that the momentum was turning as the Mercury were suddenly scoring quickly in transition. Reeves called a timeout after the Mercury tied the game at 63 with about 3 minutes left in the period, but she probably waited about 2 minutes too long to sense the shift and give her team a rest.
The Mercury extended the lead to 18 in the fourth and cruised comfortably home behind Diana Taurasi's 17 4th quarter points. In the fourth alone, MVDee shot 5 of 6 from the field, including 3 of 4 from three, and was 4-4 from the line. She finished the game with 31 points, 7 rebounds and 5 assists.
Penny Taylor, who had her own strong 20-point 3rd quarter on 8 of 13 shooting, said this about the win, "I feel like it was confidence and good energy out there ... It's just the confidence. You could see it, you could feel it. Good energy and we need to remember that and replicate it in the next game."
Half court offense
It wasn't all transition basketball for the Mercury. In the first quarter, Phoenix did a much better job moving the ball and spacing the floor and as a result, they got plenty of open looks.
Penny Taylor:
"That's been an issue for us, having good spacing. A lot of times we have four on the perimeter because Tangela is the one rising up on the pick and rolls and Candice is the one diving down and we've gotten a little bit better spacing, the wings pulling down to the corners more, so we are finding we can do the kick-kick and get open looks there, as well."
Candice Dupree on finding her way
Dupree had a much better game, catching the ball in rhythm and not forcing the action. 14 points (7-8 shooting) and 8 rebounds in 26 minutes was exactly what Mercury fans were hoping for when she came to Phoenix. Going into this game, Dupree was third in the league in field goal percentage (.582), behind Sylvia Fowles (.636) and Chante Black (.595). An 88% night is certainly going to bump her up to 2nd.
Dupree said this about her progress, "I feel a lot better than I did five games ago ... I would like my stamina to be a little bit better, but it was an adjustment period for me."
No Krispy Kreme
Mercury marketing maven, Amber Cox, made sure the team knew that they were only one point from earning a treat for the fans. Taylor, who missed the only Mercury free-throw of the game, joked, "Trying to take care of them. We need healthy fans."
KEY RUN OF THE NIGHT
Trailing 60-52 with 5:17 remaining in the third quarter, PENNY TAYLOR scored 10 points in just over two minutes sparking a 35-9 run that gave the Mercury a game-high 18-point lead (87-69) with 6:09 remaining in the game. Minnesota was able to cut the lead to nine points on two separate occasions, but Phoenix pushed its lead back to 17 with a 10-2 spurt in the final 3:16.
(Photo by Ryan Malone, SB Nation Arizona)
Jun 10 10:52p by Seth Pollack - 0 comments