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SoMnFan -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/21/2018 3:26:08 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Over the 2016 and '17 regular seasons and playoffs, the Lynx and Sparks met 16 times, with each winning eight games. The Sparks took the first title, the Lynx the second. But even before this season opened, we offered five reasons Los Angeles and Minnesota wouldn't end up in the WNBA Finals again.

Age and injuries were two of them, and they have affected the Lynx in particular. Whalen, 36, considered retiring before the season, and it's clear that she's ready to transition full time to college coaching when this WNBA season ends. Rebekkah Brunson, 36, and Seimone Augustus, 34, are still starters for the Lynx, although injuries limited Brunson to 25 games this season. She didn't play in the regular-season finale, and neither did guard Danielle Robinson, who had surgery on her ankle last week.

Maya Moore (18.0 PPG) and Sylvia Fowles (17.7 PPG and 11.9 RPG) remain elite players. But Moore has struggled with her shot more this season than anytime in her career. And there have been times when the load on Fowles has been a bit too much.


Yuck

Yuck you, too.




TJSweens -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/21/2018 3:38:36 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: David Levine

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

Is Brunson playing?



She's still listed as Questionable.

Concussions are a bitch.


If Brunson plays, they have a shot. If not, I think it is a pretty certain 1 and done.




David Levine -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/21/2018 3:44:14 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

quote:

ORIGINAL: David Levine

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

Is Brunson playing?



She's still listed as Questionable.

Concussions are a bitch.


If Brunson plays, they have a shot. If not, I think it is a pretty certain 1 and done.


Yup. She's really the key to our defense.

And it sounds like Ogwumike is going to play.




twinsfan -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/21/2018 3:54:22 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

quote:

ORIGINAL: David Levine

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

Is Brunson playing?



She's still listed as Questionable.

Concussions are a bitch.


If Brunson plays, they have a shot. If not, I think it is a pretty certain 1 and done.

What if she plays with a foggy head like Mauer has been doing for years?




twinsfan -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/21/2018 3:55:04 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Over the 2016 and '17 regular seasons and playoffs, the Lynx and Sparks met 16 times, with each winning eight games. The Sparks took the first title, the Lynx the second. But even before this season opened, we offered five reasons Los Angeles and Minnesota wouldn't end up in the WNBA Finals again.

Age and injuries were two of them, and they have affected the Lynx in particular. Whalen, 36, considered retiring before the season, and it's clear that she's ready to transition full time to college coaching when this WNBA season ends. Rebekkah Brunson, 36, and Seimone Augustus, 34, are still starters for the Lynx, although injuries limited Brunson to 25 games this season. She didn't play in the regular-season finale, and neither did guard Danielle Robinson, who had surgery on her ankle last week.

Maya Moore (18.0 PPG) and Sylvia Fowles (17.7 PPG and 11.9 RPG) remain elite players. But Moore has struggled with her shot more this season than anytime in her career. And there have been times when the load on Fowles has been a bit too much.


Yuck

Yuck you, too.

The article was just really concerning from a Lynx fan's perspective. Hence, the yuck.




David Levine -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/21/2018 6:31:31 PM)

Posting in full, because I doubt most here are subscribers:

Lindsay Whalen’s legacy, through the eyes of two kids who couldn’t turn away
Jon Krawczynski

In​ a sea of​ young​ women who came out to salute​ their hero, there was a 3-year-old​ little girl who​ was​​ seeing Lindsay Whalen in person for the first time.

On what may have been Whalen’s final home game, the Minnesota-born girl’s Minnesota-born father wanted her to be in attendance at least once to watch perhaps the most impactful Minnesota-born athlete ever to wear a uniform.

At home, the girl plays on a Playskool basketball hoop in the basement with her 5-year-old brother, the boy saying he is LeBron James and the girl hollering, “I’m Lindsay Whalen!”

She hasn’t even begun to think about whether or not she truly will want to play sports. But if she does, the opportunities afforded her will be so much richer thanks to the woman she came to watch on Sunday night.

On Lindsay Whalen Day, she climbed into the family SUV with mom, dad and brother, traversed the skyway to Target Center and sneaked down near the court for warmups to watch Whalen stretch and give her a wave. She then scaled the escalators to her seat in Section 232, a portion of the upper deck opened by the Lynx to specifically accommodate the groundswell of humanity coming out to pay tribute to the state’s favorite daughter, as Cheryl Reeve likes to call her point guard.

Whalen burst onto the scene 20 years ago, a fiery, flashy and ferocious player who brought a streetball flair and an indomitable spirit that was too big for the Sports Pavilion to hold. In doing so, she lifted the Gopher women’s program to unprecedented heights, then made a pit stop in Connecticut before returning home to spearhead the WNBA’s greatest dynasty.

And yet all of her success — a Final Four, four WNBA titles, two Olympic gold medals — pales in comparison to the revolution she has inspired. Title IX was adopted in 1972 to help address gender equity issues in sports, but it was a long, slow climb for girls and women in the first three decades of life with the new federal regulations.

In the last 10 years, participation numbers for girls and women in Minnesota have exploded, according to a report from the National Federation of State High School Associations. The number of girls competing in high school sports in Minnesota has jumped 17 percent in the last 10 years, giving the state more high school female athletes per capita than any other state.

Whalen joined the Lynx nine years ago. But she hasn’t just played. She’s been ubiquitous. She is on radio and television to promote the sport. She’s holding camps and marching in parades to grow the game. As Steve Rushin pointed out in Sports Illustrated earlier this summer, she has a hard time saying no, but that agreeable nature has led to an unprecedented level of local popularity for a female athlete.

“She could run for governor and win,” Reeve said, without even a tinge of hyperbole.

Girls wear No. 13 because of Whalen. Girls aren’t afraid to talk a little trash or bark at an official because of Whalen. Girls know there is a place for them on the court, the field or the rink in large part because of Whalen.

And now it’s almost over. The Lynx play on Tuesday night in a one-game playoff against the Sparks in Los Angeles. Should they win, they would have to win another road game on Thursday, against either Connecticut or Washington, to get a chance for another home game for Whalen before she retires. It’s been a long, tough season for the proud veteran team this year, so nothing is guaranteed.

With that in mind, Sunday’s regular-season finale offered a basketball community its last sure-fire chance at showing its appreciation for all that Whalen has done on and off the court.

The little girl’s parents didn’t want to miss the chance for her to see it in person. So the family trudged up the stairs to Row S, pulled the Lindsay Whalen commemorative cards off of their seat backs and handed them to the mother for safe keeping. The girl had been at a Timberwolves game as an infant, but this was her first time in the arena when she could really soak up the atmosphere and at least to begin to appreciate her surroundings.

All around her there were girls and women, boys and men who had come to see Lindsay one last time. In her section was a group of adolescent girls in the gold and black of Hutchinson, the town Whalen put on the map. Just down her row was a blonde-haired girl maybe a year older, laughing and dancing and cheering with the crowd. Sitting right in front of her were a mother with the salt-and-pepper hair of someone in her late 50s and her adult daughter who kept looking over her shoulder to watch the girl take it all in.

The girl took to the game and the ambiance like she’d been born there. She clapped when everyone clapped. She yelped when everyone yelped. She danced when everyone danced.

Her parents have never known her to exhibit patience or attention span, but the game seemed to consume her.

“Are the Lynx winning?”

“Where’s Lindsay?”

“C-Fense! C-Fense! C-Fense!”

Hey, you can’t nail ’em all. And truth be told, the Lynx went through large portions of the game against Washington playing something closer to c-fense than defense.

Her brother was equally entertained. He went to a Lynx game last summer and had been pestering his father to take him back again ever since. He understood the gravity of the evening, that it could be Whalen’s last game, and he kept an eye out for her bright green shoes so he knew every time she was on the floor.

This game was as important for the boy as it was for the girl. In experiencing it, he could see how a women’s player could command — and deserve — respect and adulation. More than 13,000 people came out for the game, forcing the Lynx to open the upper deck. Concession lines were long. Concourses were packed. And they were all there for Lindsay.

The boy could understand that he was watching a game that was fun, skilled and getting more popular by the year. He could see why his little sister always wants to play with him, always wants to keep up with the boys and, if given the chance, can hold her own just fine.

And he can also show his sister how much they have in common. She likes to watch basketball, and he does, too.

The girl probably didn’t quite understand the bigger picture on Sunday evening, that a Minnesota legend was essentially saying goodbye, that a community was saying thank you, that the odds were against ever seeing Whalen wearing the No. 13 in front of them again.

But even after the game was over, even as all the action had stopped and Prowl had silenced his drum and Whalen shifted from playmaker to jokemaker in the postgame ceremony to honor her 15 years in the league, the girl still stood transfixed. There’s no way she got Whalen’s crack about needing Becky Taylor, wife of Lynx owner Glen Taylor, to change her lasagna recipe to vegan later in her career to accommodate a healthier diet.

There’s no way the girl could grasp why Reeve was choking back tears while talking about a glorious nine-season run with Whalen as her point guard. But something clicked.

As the postgame ceremony dragged on well past her bedtime, her father looked over in concern that the cuddly mogwai everyone in Section 232 had fallen in love with while watching her jive and dance and cheer was about to turn into the gremlin that rears its ugly head when fatigue kicks in.

“Nita,” I said, “I think it might be time to get going.”

“No,” she replied. “Lindsay is still talking.”

So we stayed and we listened.

I’ve covered Whalen for nearly a decade now, and her retirement has been maybe the biggest sports story in the state for more than a week. Under normal circumstances, I should have been in press row on Sunday night to chronicle the event and a state celebrating its favorite daughter. As a writer, you live for the big stories and the big moments.

But all I could think about was MY favorite daughter. As a father, you are constantly trying to find the right words to help raise your children the right way, to guide them along and instill the proper values and ideals. But this night felt like the rare opportunity to show both of them, rather than tell them.

Owen and Nita may be too young to fully remember all of the details from this night once they grow older. But the hope is that it will serve as a piece of foundation, something that gets embedded into the subconscious and sits there in the backs of their minds to help them as they try to find their way.

For Owen, understanding that women’s athletes can be cool and fun and entertaining just like the men. That they deserve the chance to thrill us and disappoint us and bring us all together.

For Nita, another dream to consider, another path to follow, another role model that can stand on equal footing right next to Kevin McHale, Neal Broten and any other male athlete to ever call Minnesota home. Another reason to never back down, never give in and never take no for an answer (except when your parents say it’s time to go to bed).

My wife and I have watched Nita grow into an athletic, competitive, hilarious and supremely confident girl. I say it all the time, but the swagger in her walk and the certainty in her talk slay me on a daily basis. And truth be told, she can drive us crazy sometimes with her stubbornness.

When I listen to Reeve talk about her upbringing, when I’ve had the chance to chat with Whalen’s parents about the little girl who would grow into the icon, the similarities are striking.

I’m not saying Nita is the next Lindsay Whalen. There may never be another.

But thanks to Lindsay, Nita can grow up knowing that she at least has a chance to be.

https://theathletic.com/482255/2018/08/21/lindsay-whalen-legacy-lynx-through-the-eyes-of-two-kids-who-couldnt-turn-away/




David Levine -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/21/2018 9:44:38 PM)

No Brunson.




David Levine -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/21/2018 9:57:30 PM)

I hate playing the Sparks.




David Levine -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/21/2018 9:58:13 PM)

Zandalasini needs to hit those.




David Levine -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/21/2018 10:02:20 PM)

Not a pretty game, but we're up 16-15 after 1.




kgdabom -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/21/2018 10:55:29 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

quote:

ORIGINAL: kgdabom

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

I guess I should stay in my lane.

It is a very strange playoff format tiered with bye's for the team with the top four records. 6 plays 7 in round one and 5 plays 8. The winners move on to play the 3 and 4 seeds. The winners of that round move on to play the 1-2 seeds.

kg, I appreciate your friendly reply, even though it was to correct my ignorance on the WNBA playoff format. DL was snarky when he replied to me, wouldn't you say? Go SCSU (only if the Beavers or Gophers are not involved)!

It's the most unusual playoff format ever created. It would be easy to make a mistake.




kgdabom -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/21/2018 11:00:42 PM)

Down 13 in the late 3rd. Will take a sports miracle to win now.




David Levine -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/21/2018 11:05:27 PM)

Strong finish to the 3rd.

Its anyone's game.




David Levine -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/21/2018 11:43:39 PM)

That was disappointing.

Maya needed to be a star tonight - and she wasn't.

Nobody really stepped up for us other than Fagbenle.

Its going to be a very interesting offseason.




SoMnFan -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/22/2018 7:24:42 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

Over the 2016 and '17 regular seasons and playoffs, the Lynx and Sparks met 16 times, with each winning eight games. The Sparks took the first title, the Lynx the second. But even before this season opened, we offered five reasons Los Angeles and Minnesota wouldn't end up in the WNBA Finals again.

Age and injuries were two of them, and they have affected the Lynx in particular. Whalen, 36, considered retiring before the season, and it's clear that she's ready to transition full time to college coaching when this WNBA season ends. Rebekkah Brunson, 36, and Seimone Augustus, 34, are still starters for the Lynx, although injuries limited Brunson to 25 games this season. She didn't play in the regular-season finale, and neither did guard Danielle Robinson, who had surgery on her ankle last week.

Maya Moore (18.0 PPG) and Sylvia Fowles (17.7 PPG and 11.9 RPG) remain elite players. But Moore has struggled with her shot more this season than anytime in her career. And there have been times when the load on Fowles has been a bit too much.


Yuck

Yuck you, too.

The article was just really concerning from a Lynx fan's perspective. Hence, the yuck.

Just trying to drag out a laugh once in awhile, my man.




SoMnFan -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/22/2018 7:25:42 AM)

To the Lynx ....

[sm=icon_salut.gif]




TJSweens -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/22/2018 8:33:40 AM)

It was a hell of a run, but sadly all things must end eventually. Hard to believe. 8 years, 7 finals, 4 championships, 2 league MVP's. They just won because that's what winners do. They are skilled, they want it more, they find a way. Father time finally caught up with a few great players. They gave him one hell of a fight, but he always wins in the end. Now it's on Reeves to rebuild quickly around Maya and Syl. They are still young enough to play at an elite level for a few more years, if she can reassemble a supporting cast that can defend and shoot the 3 ball.




TJSweens -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/22/2018 9:51:33 AM)

Don't know if this was posted yet:

From Lindsay Whalen, with love: Lynx guard pens letter of thanks ... and an IOU
No. 13 salutes the many who guided her career forward and upward.

On Monday, Lindsay Whalen announced her retirement, and on Sunday she will play her final regular-season game at Target Center. With the playoffs days away and Whalen’s new career as Gophers head coach looming, she agreed to share memories of her career. Here are 13 thoughts from No. 13, a few thank-yous and an IOU:

1. First thank you goes to Coach T [Mike Thibault] for drafting me. I knew he was going to; he came to watch me in the Bahamas over Thanksgiving break in my senior year. Now, he got to go to the Bahamas. But he still was watching me play instead of being at home with his family. So I figured he was serious.

I did want to stay home at the time after the run to the Final Four. But going to Connecticut was the best thing for me. I grew as a person. He taught me how to be a pro. I always think back to one conversation we had that helped take my game to another level. It was right after my third season in the league and we had lost to the Detroit Shock in the WNBA semifinals, the first time we hadn’t made the Finals in my time there. For me, personally, it was hard. I was coming off reconstructive ankle surgery that season. As any athlete knows, that first year playing after a major surgery is very difficult.

After that season he challenged me to get in the best shape of my life. He wanted me to get leaner, faster, stronger. He knew I was entering the prime of my career and he wanted to challenge me. As an athlete you think you’re already doing everything you can to be a great player.

It wasn’t the easiest conversation, but I am forever grateful. Because once I got myself in that condition, to play at that level, I was runner-up for the WNBA MVP and first team All-WNBA in 2008. He saw something in me I did not see in myself. And that’s the definition of a great coach and mentor. Thank you, Coach T!

2. Thank you to Coach [Cheryl] Reeve. The 2010 season was my first back in Minnesota. It was also the first season there for Coach and Becky [Rebekkah Brunson]. We went through so many close losses that year. But I think we would all point back to that season as something we had to go through to have the success we had later.

We had one meeting in particular that I will never forget, in Coach’s office, after the All-Star Game in 2010. This conversation would change my career and, to be honest, my life. I had made it to a Final Four in college and two WNBA Finals but did not win a championship. I had never, as a player, been able to break that threshold. I always felt so much pride in being an underdog, and underrated. Those feelings carried me and my teams a long way, but never to the top. So, it went something like this: She asked me what I averaged during the 2008 season when I was first-team All-WNBA. And then she asked me to average that stat line in practice. Allen Iverson would have been beside himself. Practice? We’re talking about practice. Yes, in practice. So, my goal was to average 15 points, six assists and five rebounds in practice. This was when I truly started to realize as a player that how you practice is how you play. Those habits you create every day in practice determine how you perform. I’d always practiced hard. But now it was so much more focused.

Every day I had a mission, a goal. I was already driven, but now it had to go to another level for our team to be successful. My shooting percentages began to rise, my scoring, assists and rebounds came along with it. That fall I made my first USA Basketball national team and we won a gold medal at the 2010 World Championships. Four WNBA championships and four gold medals later I guess you could say I am thankful for that and the many other conversations me and Coach Reeve have had over the years. She turned me into a champion. I was always an underdog and loved that role. But being a champion is a lot more fun! Thank you, Coach!

3. Sylvia Fowles is the nicest dominant MVP there has ever been. Name me another MVP that helps organize the jerseys and shoes in nice and neat piles for the equipment staff. That’s right, you can’t. In 2015, when we reshuffled the deck and got Syl, we all knew we were getting a dominant low-post player. What we didn’t know was we were getting one of the kindest human beings on the planet. Three years after we traded for Syl she won the MVP of the 2017 regular season and the 2017 Finals MVP. Thank you, Syl!

4. Seimone Augustus is the most unselfish superstar there has ever been. Name me another league-leading scorer and gold medalist who willfully sacrificed her scoring average and some of the spotlight to win championships. That’s right, you can’t. Seimone is the original Lynx. Without her unselfishness, killer jump shot and unguardable crossover, none of this would have ever happened. She led us to our first championship in 2011 by her sheer will and determination. Her performance in Game 2 [36 points, eight rebounds] against Atlanta, at home, will go down as the best individual performance in a game I have ever been a part of. Thank you, Money Mone.

5. Maya Moore takes and makes shots other people would never dream of taking. She has done things few basketball players have ever done. There are two people in this world that have a “Wings” poster. Maya is that good. There is so much more to Maya though. She is funny, thoughtful, caring, compassionate, she is a great singer and songwriter. She just also happens to do something better than everyone else in the world. Thank you for your talent and grace, Maya.

6. Rebekkah Brunson is the ultimate champion, an all-time winner on an all-time team. Remember when your coaches always told you rebounding wins championships? They were right, huh? The all-time leading rebounder in WNBA history has the most rings. Makes sense. I can’t count how many games Becky would win for us because of her sheer heart and effort. Power forward is one of the most talented positions in basketball. We always had an advantage because we could just sic Brunson on whoever that opponent would be. And we always won that matchup. Thank you, Becky.

7. Taj McWilliams-Franklin taught me how to be a leader. Never afraid to tell you like it is, Mamma Taj taught all of us how to win in 2011. Taj is as much a part of these championships that we have won as when she led us in that season. Thank you, Taj!
8. Janel McCarville always made things fun. One of the most charismatic, easygoing teammates you are ever going to find. We are about as close to being sisters as you can get while not being related. I am so thankful that, at the end of the regional finals against Duke, she put her arm around me for that famous hug. Now when I think of my college years and that Final Four run, that is instantly what I think of. Thank you, Janel.

9. Since about 2002 my life has been a little different from a lot of people. There have been so many things to be thankful for, of course. But something that gets lost in the shuffle a little bit is how difficult at times it must have been to be my younger sibling. I have four of them, and at least some of the pressure and the expectations put on them at times has been shared. I know it has not always been easy on them. But they always support. They come to the games when they can, and I know they are all just a phone call away. I am so lucky to have Katie, Casey, Annie and Thomas as my brothers and sisters. Thank you guys for being there for every step!

10. My parents, Neil and Kathy, are the reason all of me and my brothers and sisters are successful and carry ourselves the way we do. They taught us to be humble, hardworking, honest and loyal. We learned very early how to work hard to make a living and support your family. My mom had five kids, a full-time job, and somehow we made it to all of our activities and a family dinner most nights of the week. That is a real miracle. My dad worked the late shift for 36 years at 3M to make sure we had everything we needed. As I got older I began to understand and appreciate the sacrifices he was making every time he went to work at 6 p.m. and got home at 6 a.m. Thank you, Mom and Dad!

11. Thank you to my husband, Ben [Greve], who has traveled the world and back with me during this journey. He is my best friend and holds our house together. He’s been there for 15 WNBA seasons, 10 seasons overseas and those years on the Olympic team. We’ve traveled the world and had a ball doing it. I know there are plenty of sacrifices he has made as well along the way so I could get to play this game. Thank you, Ben!

12. Thank you to the fans. Creating a homecourt advantage at Williams Arena and Target Center is a partnership, and we did that together all of these years. Thank you for the years and years of support. Many more to come!

13. And finally, I have an IOU, if you will. We made it to the Final Four when I played at the University of Minnesota. It is now my goal to bring a national championship to the University of Minnesota. I don’t know how long it is going to take, or just how we are going to do it yet. But I won’t stop working until that has happened.




twinsfan -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/22/2018 10:51:32 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

It was a hell of a run, but sadly all things must end eventually. Hard to believe. 8 years, 7 finals, 4 championships, 2 league MVP's. They just won because that's what winners do. They are skilled, they want it more, they find a way. Father time finally caught up with a few great players. They gave him one hell of a fight, but he always wins in the end. Now it's on Reeves to rebuild quickly around Maya and Syl. They are still young enough to play at an elite level for a few more years, if she can reassemble a supporting cast that can defend and shoot the 3 ball.

I would start shopping Maya and Fowles. We need to stock up on draft picks and younger players. Patchworking this together with Maya and Fowles still on the roster will result in more mediocre seasons like this one. Can you imagine the haul you could get if you traded those two players in separate deals? We'll be back on top in 3 years.




TJSweens -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/22/2018 11:03:25 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

It was a hell of a run, but sadly all things must end eventually. Hard to believe. 8 years, 7 finals, 4 championships, 2 league MVP's. They just won because that's what winners do. They are skilled, they want it more, they find a way. Father time finally caught up with a few great players. They gave him one hell of a fight, but he always wins in the end. Now it's on Reeves to rebuild quickly around Maya and Syl. They are still young enough to play at an elite level for a few more years, if she can reassemble a supporting cast that can defend and shoot the 3 ball.

I would start shopping Maya and Fowles. We need to stock up on draft picks and younger players. Patchworking this together with Maya and Fowles still on the roster will result in more mediocre seasons like this one. Can you imagine the haul you could get if you traded those two players in separate deals? We'll be back on top in 3 years.


There is a higher percentage in rebuilding around Sylvia and Maya IMO. Your answer is to trade off Maya and Big Syl, in hopes that you are lucky enough to draft players like Maya and Big Syl. I'll just keep the ones I have who are still in their primes. Take a chapter from the Spurs and Jazz books and keep reworking around a great core.




David Levine -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/22/2018 11:25:10 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: twinsfan

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

It was a hell of a run, but sadly all things must end eventually. Hard to believe. 8 years, 7 finals, 4 championships, 2 league MVP's. They just won because that's what winners do. They are skilled, they want it more, they find a way. Father time finally caught up with a few great players. They gave him one hell of a fight, but he always wins in the end. Now it's on Reeves to rebuild quickly around Maya and Syl. They are still young enough to play at an elite level for a few more years, if she can reassemble a supporting cast that can defend and shoot the 3 ball.

I would start shopping Maya and Fowles. We need to stock up on draft picks and younger players. Patchworking this together with Maya and Fowles still on the roster will result in more mediocre seasons like this one. Can you imagine the haul you could get if you traded those two players in separate deals? We'll be back on top in 3 years.


Teams trading superstars in their primes almost always lose on the deals.

Draft picks are a huge crapshoot - especially in the WNBA.




SoMnFan -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/22/2018 11:34:13 AM)

Lindsay just keeps knocking it out of the park.
And across the road, and down the hill, and into the river.
I wouldn't doubt anything she says.




kgdabom -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/22/2018 11:36:38 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

To the Lynx ....

[sm=icon_salut.gif]

Yep it was a hell of a run. Without Lindsay it is a new team. Whatever success they achieve now would be a new run.




SoMnFan -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/22/2018 11:36:59 AM)

She touches every aspect of life in that letter.
She simply gets shit.
Times a hundred.




thebigo -> RE: Minnesota Lynx (8/23/2018 12:11:19 AM)

The Lynx just need another stretch of drafting #1 overall back to back to back each year hitting on a once in a decade player.




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