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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 6/11/2020 2:08:11 PM   
TJSweens


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Got this from Fivethirtyeight.com

Maya Moore Gave Up More To Fight For Social Justice Than Almost Any Athlete
By Chris Herring and Neil Paine
Published Jun. 11, 2020

Among sports’ most influential civil-rights voices, a few names frequently rise to the top. In an earlier era, Muhammad Ali was the defining figure; more recently, Colin Kaepernick has stepped to the forefront in the battle for equality. But as ESPN’s Howard Bryant recently pointed out, there is an athlete who is consistently missing from these conversations, even though her sacrifice in the name of justice has been as great as anyone’s:

Maya Moore, one of the most accomplished women’s basketball players in the history of the sport, announced in February 2019 that she was taking a sabbatical, one that she was hoping would allow her to tap into her faith and find her life’s purpose. “I’m sure this year will be hard in ways that I don’t even know yet,” she said. “But it will also be rewarding in ways I’ve yet to see, too.”

It would become clear that Moore, who turns 31 today, saw the idea of criminal-justice reform as part of her calling. In our current moment, when America’s policing of people of color is getting a long-overdue reexamination, Moore’s mission should take on an even greater significance in the history of athletes whose impact was felt beyond the game itself.

Even in 2017, well before she left the WNBA, Moore talked about how her great-uncle’s work in prison ministry had influenced her. Her great-uncle had gotten to know one incarcerated man in particular who stood out: Jonathan Irons. Moore’s extended family began researching the details of his 1998 conviction on first-degree assault, first-degree burglary and armed criminal action charges, which resulted in a 50-year sentence.1 No blood, footprints or fingerprints tied Irons to the crime; and Irons, a poor black teenager from Missouri, had been convicted by an all-white jury.

Irons was 16 years old at the time of the crime.
Moore, believing Irons had been wrongfully convicted, got more involved in the fight to exonerate him, both visiting and befriending him in prison while also attending his hearings.

The effort culminated in March when a judge overturned Irons’s conviction. “She saved my life,” said Irons, who is now 40 years old and has spent 23 years behind bars. “I would not have had this chance if not for her and her wonderful family.”

Moore compared the overturning of Irons’s conviction to hoisting a Final Four trophy. When she heard the news, she said she felt “redemption” for taking time off from basketball.

Moore has also held firm to her plan of sitting out another WNBA season.

Moore, of course, isn’t the first high-profile athlete to sacrifice a chunk of her career for a larger cause. Ali, who was an undefeated heavyweight champion when he was banned from boxing for refusing to serve in the Vietnam War, is perhaps the best-known case. Curt Flood’s defiance paved the way for free agency in sports, and he was all but blackballed from baseball. And Kaepernick hasn’t been given a contract since taking a knee.

But in some ways, Moore’s decision is even more noteworthy. For starters, she has a resume worthy of GOAT consideration: six WNBA Finals trips, four WNBA titles, two NCAA titles at UConn, two Olympic gold medals and one league MVP award. According to our WNBA metric of wins generated, Moore (46.0) was the second-best player of the 2010s — trailing only teammate Sylvia Fowles (51.4) — despite not playing at all in either of the seasons that bookended the decade. And on a per-season basis, Moore generated more wins (5.7 per year) than anyone in WNBA history … except the GOAT herself, Cynthia Cooper:

Beyond that, she plays a pro sport that pays far less than others — one in which the salaries have been so low on a relative scale that many players go overseas during the offseason to play, even though that increases their injury risk. Moore walked away from the game despite having less of a chance than her male counterparts to build up financial security.

Moore’s sacrifice comes into even clearer focus when you consider the average aging curve of a WNBA player. To see how a typical great player’s career progresses, we looked at the top 27 currently retired WNBA players by wins generated2 and measured what share of their eventual lifetime value they produced through each age-season of their career, on average:

Through a player’s age-29 season — the age Moore was in during her last WNBA year — she tends to have generated about 68 percent of the wins she’ll ever produce in a career. The implication is that if Moore had played her entire career uninterrupted, she would have generated a total of 67.4 wins … which would have been second-best in WNBA history, behind Tamika Catchings (78.4). Maybe that’s overly optimistic — Moore had her worst season in 2018, before taking her hiatus — but it does give an indication of how great she had been up to that point.

To flip that 68 percent figure around, it also means Moore left the game voluntarily — to fight for Irons’s freedom — with roughly a third of her career left unfinished. And while Moore has said she does not plan to retire permanently, the years she has already missed were the most productive remaining in her career when she walked away. Going back to our aging curve for the average great player, she produces about 14 percent of her total career value at ages 30 and 31; from age 32 onward, only 18 percent of her career value is left to be achieved, on average.

That she put the ball down at 29 — after a seven-year run that saw six trips to the WNBA Finals — should put her in the same breath with some of the most dominant athletes of all-time who left their sports at such a young age. In fact, it’s hard to find a truly similar comparison for Moore’s sudden absence from the game.
Like Moore, Michael Jordan left basketball after his age-29 season — to play baseball — but he eventually came back to dominate the NBA again. (You might have recently seen a series about that.) Yao Ming retired in 2011 at age 30, but that was because of foot and ankle injuries. In football, Barry Sanders walked away at a young age, but he at least got an age-30 season in. Jim Brown left after his age-29 campaign, just like Moore, though that was mainly to pursue an acting career. In baseball, Sandy Koufax pitched his final game at age 30 because of an arthritic condition in his left elbow that made throwing a baseball agony. If you throw out players who burned brightly but retired prematurely due to injury, the list of Moore-like comparisons is quite short.

Even shorter is the list of truly great players who left a career behind because they believed in something bigger than the sport. (As much of a pioneer as Kaepernick was, even he was past his peak performance when he took a knee.) Moore is special because she could have gone about her business as one of the best players in WNBA history, but instead she chose to lend her voice and platform to victims of injustice.

For that reason, history should remember her in the same conversation as Ali and Kaepernick — a conversation that has only grown in importance over the past few weeks.

_____________________________

"The eternal fate of the noble and enlightened: to be brutally crushed by the armed and dumb."
Post #: 3726
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 6/18/2020 1:44:38 PM   
Mr. Ed


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18 Lynx and Wolves employees out of work

others taking pay cuts

Glenn Taylor, you're all heart.

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Escape while you can!
Post #: 3727
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 6/18/2020 6:07:50 PM   
David Levine


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Terrific, in-depth piece at ESPN today:

Inside WNBA legend Maya Moore's extraordinary quest for justice

https://www.espn.com/wnba/story/_/id/29315369/inside-wnba-legend-maya-moore-extraordinary-quest-justice
Post #: 3728
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 6/18/2020 6:09:24 PM   
David Levine


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MINNEAPOLIS/ST. PAUL – Minnesota Lynx Head Coach and General Manager Cheryl Reeve announced the team has signed forward Megan Huff.

It was also announced today that forward Cecilia Zandalasini will miss the 2020 season (non-active, personal decision).
Post #: 3729
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 7/2/2020 9:44:18 AM   
TJSweens


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The Missouri Supreme Court has rejected the AG's appeal of the appeals judge overturning the Jonathan Irons conviction. The case was remanded to the local prosecutor, who has declined to retry the case and Irons has been released and is officially a free man.

_____________________________

"The eternal fate of the noble and enlightened: to be brutally crushed by the armed and dumb."
Post #: 3730
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 7/2/2020 12:57:32 PM   
David Levine


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Lynx head coach and general manager Cheryl Reeve’s statement on Maya Moore

“Maya Moore got to celebrate another championship yesterday and none of us who have been blessed to have Maya in our lives are surprised. I cannot imagine, however, what this one must feel like. I was overwhelmed seeing Maya watch Jonathan Irons walk out of the Jefferson City Correctional Center a free man. For the last few years we watched as she gracefully committed herself to Jonathan’s case, and as she has done so often on the basketball court, put the Irons team on her back. I am overcome with joy that Maya and all involved were able to reach their goal of Jonathan’s exoneration.

I also can’t help but feel a great deal of anger. Maya Moore should never have had to leave her profession to engage in the fight against the two-tiered criminal justice system that over polices, wrongfully convicts, and over sentences black and brown communities. The criminal justice system in America is so far from fair and equal and it angers me that Maya has had to sacrifice so much to overcome this racially disparate system.

On behalf of the Lynx organization, we are so proud of Maya for earning the biggest win of her career. I am sure that she was voted MVP of this championship, too. This time there is no hardware to take home to the trophy case, just a wrongfully convicted black man walking free.”
Post #: 3731
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 7/26/2020 1:23:02 PM   
kgdabom

 

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Lynx start the season with a win. I thought Connecticut was a good team, but I'm a bit out of touch.
Fowles with a MONSTER game. 17 points 18 boards and 4 blocks.

Somebody named Dangerfield with 21 minutes off the bench and 10 points.
Collier and Johnson with 11 and 13 points respectively.

_____________________________

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Post #: 3732
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 7/26/2020 9:38:38 PM   
TJSweens


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Crystal Dangerfield is our second round draft choice this year out of U Conn. She was a 4 year starter there at point guard.

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Post #: 3733
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 7/27/2020 7:08:05 AM   
SoMnFan


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quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

Crystal Dangerfield is our second round draft choice this year out of U Conn. She was a 4 year starter there at point guard.

I tell ya
She gets NO RESPECT

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Play like a Pirate.
Post #: 3734
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 7/27/2020 8:45:35 AM   
kgdabom

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

Crystal Dangerfield is our second round draft choice this year out of U Conn. She was a 4 year starter there at point guard.

I tell ya
She gets NO RESPECT

That would be a very nice game for our first round pick which I forget who that was.
Edit: Mikiah Herbert Harrigan #6 overall 2020 WNBA Draft.
Did not play. Has she been traded? Injured or the Lynx just didn't like her enough to give her any minutes?

< Message edited by kgdabom -- 7/27/2020 8:56:21 AM >


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So let it be done."
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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 7/27/2020 9:26:27 AM   
TJSweens


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Harrigan is considered a bit raw, but with a huge upside. She is reportedly a special project for Rebekkah Brunson and Plenette Pierson.

Dangerfield (shall we call her Rodney?) was considered the most pure point guard in the draft. Most mocks had her going in the first round, including going to the Lynx at #6. It appears the Lynx got good value in her.

_____________________________

"The eternal fate of the noble and enlightened: to be brutally crushed by the armed and dumb."
Post #: 3736
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 7/27/2020 10:18:00 AM   
Phil Riewer


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

Crystal Dangerfield is our second round draft choice this year out of U Conn. She was a 4 year starter there at point guard.

I tell ya
She gets NO RESPECT


Me Likes that nickname.

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KIA 23 March 2007 Habbaniyah Iraq
Post #: 3737
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 7/27/2020 1:11:36 PM   
kgdabom

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

Harrigan is considered a bit raw, but with a huge upside. She is reportedly a special project for Rebekkah Brunson and Plenette Pierson.

Dangerfield (shall we call her Rodney?) was considered the most pure point guard in the draft. Most mocks had her going in the first round, including going to the Lynx at #6. It appears the Lynx got good value in her.

Yep I read there was a lot of expectation we would take Dangerfield at pick #6. Getting her at 16 seems crazy. The Lynx I loved are no more. No Maya Moore, No Seimone, no Brunson. It's a whole new gang with Fowles.

_____________________________

"So let it be written.
So let it be done."
Post #: 3738
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 7/29/2020 10:46:20 AM   
David Levine


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Congrats to Sylvia Fowles, who passed her former teammate and current coach Rebekkah Brunson to become the WNBA’s all time leading rebounder.
Post #: 3739
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 7/29/2020 10:50:33 AM   
David Levine


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Unfortunately we were routed by Seattle.

We killed them on the glass - our starting frontcourt outrebounded their entire team 25-24, but we were out shot 53% to 34%, and we had more turnovers than assists.

The rookies did not look good. Dangerfield was 0/3, tallying just an assist and a turnover in her 11 minutes.

Herbert Harrgan made her debut finishing with 0 points (0/4), 1 rebound, 1 block and 1 turnover in 11 minutes.
Post #: 3740
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 7/29/2020 6:00:42 PM   
David Levine


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And the hits keep coming:

Minnesota Lynx forward/guard Karima Christmas-Kelly suffered a ruptured right Achilles tendon in Tuesday's loss to Seattle and will miss the rest of the WNBA season. It was the first serious injury of the WNBA season, which began on Saturday.
Post #: 3741
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 7/29/2020 10:29:00 PM   
TJSweens


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Two ACL surgeries and now a ruptured Achilles tendon. Her right leg has been non stop trouble.

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"The eternal fate of the noble and enlightened: to be brutally crushed by the armed and dumb."
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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 7/31/2020 2:48:00 PM   
SoMnFan


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Nice win for the Lynx last night

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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 7/31/2020 9:25:40 PM   
kgdabom

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Nice win for the Lynx last night

Dangerfield is starting and Harrigan is contributing now. Had a 12 point lead with 3 minutes to go and just held on.

_____________________________

"So let it be written.
So let it be done."
Post #: 3744
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 8/6/2020 2:19:00 AM   
David Levine


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Carleton, Brown have career nights, Lynx beat Liberty 92-66
The Associated Press

BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) Bridget Carleton scored a career-high 25 points, Lexie Brown had a season-high 15 points and career-best seven steals, and the Minnesota Lynx beat the New York Liberty 93-66 on Wednesday night.

Minnesota won without Sylvia Fowles, who sat out to rest her calf. The Lynx were also missing Shenise Johnson to an injury.

Brown was making her first appearance since suffering a concussion.

Amanda Zahui B. led New York (0-5) with 13 points. The Liberty announced earlier in the day that Sabrina Ionescu had gone to New York to get her ankle injury evaluated.

The Lynx (4-1) shot 51% percent from the field and hit 10 of 21 from 3-point range. They held the Liberty without a field goal for nearly nine minutes during a 20-1 third-quarter run that turned Minnesota's two-point halftime deficit into a 24-point lead when Carleton made a basket with 1:33 left in the period.
Post #: 3745
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 8/6/2020 8:39:17 AM   
kgdabom

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: David Levine

Carleton, Brown have career nights, Lynx beat Liberty 92-66
The Associated Press

BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) Bridget Carleton scored a career-high 25 points, Lexie Brown had a season-high 15 points and career-best seven steals, and the Minnesota Lynx beat the New York Liberty 93-66 on Wednesday night.

Minnesota won without Sylvia Fowles, who sat out to rest her calf. The Lynx were also missing Shenise Johnson to an injury.

Brown was making her first appearance since suffering a concussion.

Amanda Zahui B. led New York (0-5) with 13 points. The Liberty announced earlier in the day that Sabrina Ionescu had gone to New York to get her ankle injury evaluated.

The Lynx (4-1) shot 51% percent from the field and hit 10 of 21 from 3-point range. They held the Liberty without a field goal for nearly nine minutes during a 20-1 third-quarter run that turned Minnesota's two-point halftime deficit into a 24-point lead when Carleton made a basket with 1:33 left in the period.

Great game. I wonder how bad the Liberty are though. 0-5 on the season.

_____________________________

"So let it be written.
So let it be done."
Post #: 3746
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 8/6/2020 10:46:52 AM   
David Levine


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Approximately 30 minutes before tip-off Lynx second year forward Bridget Carleton was informed that she would be getting her first career WNBA start. Sylvia Fowles was a late scratch with a minor calf injury. With Damiris Dantas and Napheesa Collier sliding up a spot, Carleton would get the nod at the small forward position.

Carleton seized the moment in a major way. Not only did she contribute to her team’s blowout win over New York, she was consistently the best player on the floor. In a career high 33 minutes she scored a career high 25 points. The shot was falling from all over the court as she shot 11-16 overall including a perfect 3-3 from beyond the arc. She also added seven rebounds and three assists. Her methodical shot creation and heads-up ability to be effective with or without the ball is impressive. She’s also a reliable, versatile defender.

The Ontario-born Carleton played four years at Iowa State before being drafted last year by the Connecticut Sun. She joined the Lynx late last season after being claimed off waivers. This summer she’s just one of many young Minnesota players looking to prove themselves at the WNBA level.

https://www.canishoopus.com/2020/8/6/21356727/lynx-92-liberty-66-oh-canada
Post #: 3747
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 8/6/2020 11:25:47 AM   
TJSweens


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Odyssey Sims joins Lynx in Florida, could play in a week

The 2019 WNBA All-Star guard gave birth to a son in April.

By Kent Youngblood Star Tribune AUGUST 6, 2020 — 11:09AM

Lynx guard Odyssey Sims is in the WNBA bubble at the IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla. and her return to the team could be just days away, according to coach Cheryl Reeve.

Sims, an All-Star last season who gave birth to a son in early April, flew from Texas to Florida on Sunday. WNBA rules designed to control the spread of the coronavirus required her to quarantine at an off-campus hotel for four nights, being tested every day. As of Thursday she was allowed into the bubble, but will have to spend three more nights quarantined in her room, with daily testing.

If all goes well with the testing Sims would be available to the team starting Sunday. But because she has to serve a two-game suspension stemming from her DWI case last summer, the earliest she could play in a game with the Lynx would be Aug. 13 against the Las Vegas Aces.

Her return will add much-needed depth in a backcourt that is without Shenise Johnson (hamstring) for the near future. Acquired before the 2019 season, Sims had her best season as a pro, starting all 34 games and averaging 14.5 points, 5.4 assists and 1.4 steals per game.

A corresponding roster move will have to be made to make room for Sims on the roster.


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"The eternal fate of the noble and enlightened: to be brutally crushed by the armed and dumb."
Post #: 3748
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 8/6/2020 11:34:03 AM   
David Levine


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That's really surprising that she plans to play.
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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 8/7/2020 9:26:06 PM   
David Levine


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Lynx beat the Fever 87-80, move to 5-1.

Lexi Brown finished with a career high 26 points, nine assists, six boards, and four steals.

Lynx shoot 52/50/83 as a team.
Post #: 3750
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