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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 4/10/2019 7:45:58 PM   
TJSweens


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Ogunbowale was gone one pick before. Bummer.

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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 4/10/2019 8:18:56 PM   
David Levine


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Hmm.

Pick #16: Jessica Shepard (Notre Dame). Guard that attempted a total of three 3pt shots over the past 2 years.

Pick #18: Natisha Hiedeman (Marquette). Shot 40% on 3s last year. There's our shooter, but we traded her for Lexie Brown. The 9th overall pick last year who barely played (124 minutes over 22 games)

Pick #20 Cierra Dillard (Buffalo). Another Guard that is a career 34% 3pt shooter.

Pick #30 Kenisha Bell (Minnesota). Another non-shooter. Won't make the team, but was most likely drafted as a favor to Whalen.
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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 4/10/2019 9:15:08 PM   
TJSweens


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Gotta say I'm not real impressed with Reeve's performance as a GM.

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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 4/10/2019 9:24:00 PM   
TJSweens


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quote:

ORIGINAL: David Levine

Hmm.

Pick #16: Jessica Shepard (Notre Dame). Guard that attempted a total of three 3pt shots over the past 2 years.

Pick #18: Natisha Hiedeman (Marquette). Shot 40% on 3s last year. There's our shooter, but we traded her for Lexie Brown. The 9th overall pick last year who barely played (124 minutes over 22 games)

Pick #20 Cierra Dillard (Buffalo). Another Guard that is a career 34% 3pt shooter.

Pick #30 Kenisha Bell (Minnesota). Another non-shooter. Won't make the team, but was most likely drafted as a favor to Whalen.


She didn't play much ad a rookie, but Brown is a 3pt shooter.

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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 4/10/2019 10:21:55 PM   
David Levine


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With the sixth pick in the WNBA Draft, the Minnesota Lynx selected UConn forward Napheesa Collier, two picks after the Chicago Sky selected Katie Lou Samuelson fourth overall.

“We talk about Napheesa being a little bit of everything, a Swiss Army knife,” Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve said via Twitter. “My experience with her at USA Basketball gave me a really good look into who she is and what she’s capable of.”

Last season, the Lynx finished seventh in the league but will be without star Maya Moore in 2019, who is sitting out the season for personal reasons. Collier is the sixth former UConn player to be drafted by Minnesota.

The former Husky is coming off a four-year career in Storrs where she was named AAC Player of the Year Twice while also earning All-American honors three years in a row as well as the Katrina McClain Award for the nation’s best power forward. As a team, UConn won a national championship and reached the Final Four all four years of Collier’s career.

Collier finished her career third on the Huskies’ all-time scoring list with 2,391 points behind only Maya Moore and Breanna Stewart. As a senior, Collier put together the best rebounding season in program history, snatching 411 boards — 39 more than the previous record set by Tina Charles.

Collier is the 38th former Husky to be selected in the WNBA Draft and the 19th taken in the top 10. Collier and Samuelson are the 12th set of UConn teammates to be taken in the same draft.

https://www.theuconnblog.com/2019/4/10/18304596/uconn-huskies-womens-basketball-napheesa-collier-selected-no-6-overall-minnesota-lynx-in-wnba-draft
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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 4/11/2019 10:11:04 AM   
TJSweens


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Not surprisingly, there aren't a whole lot of sites out there that assign WNBA draft grades. I did find one at FAN SIDED and they say that Lynx had the best draft out of anyone. There rational is:

- Collier is the complete player, efficient scorer, great defender / rebounder with great work ethic and high BBIQ. They believe that work with Walt Hopkins will improve her 3 pt shot. She did hit 43% as a junior. She is expected to start right away
- Shepard is incredibly efficient and a first round talent who was a steal #16. They expect her to play huge minutes behind Syl and Brunson.
- Flipping Hiedeman for Brown was also a steal. Brown's lack of PT had more to do with being stuck behind 2 good veteran PG at Connecticut than anything else.
- Dillard is good long range scoring threat.

6. Minnesota selected Napheesa Collier, 6’1 F, Connecticut
Look, there’s no getting around the massive night the Lynx had, and it starts with Collier, an absolutely perfect fit who Cheryl Reeve had experience coaching with USA Basketball last year. Collier does everything extremely well except shoot the three, and she knows it, and she’s going to a staff with Walt Hopkins, so that’ll probably change soon as well.
But Collier is only the start of their massive night. Consider that at 16, they got a first-round talent in Jessica Shepard. At 18, they drafted Natasha Hiedeman, but traded her to the Connecticut Sun for Lexie Brown, who is indisputably a first-round talent (was selected in the first round by the Sun) and whose ceiling is an elite two-way point guard who shoots the three and grabs steals in bunches. At 20, they got Cierra Dillard, who can create her own shot and plays relentlessly, an important scorer on Cheryl Reeve’s second unit. And in round three they even got Kenisha Bell, who may struggle to make the roster, but with give the U of M folks something to cheer about in the preseason.
Shepard has a chance to play huge minutes, Collier looks to me like an immediate starter, and the change-of-pace from Danielle Robinson to Lexie Brown will give opponents fits. This was a big, big night for the Lynx, who look to me like they had the best draft of anyone.


https://highposthoops.com/2019/04/10/wnba-draft-pick-pick-analysis-interviews/7/

< Message edited by TJSweens -- 4/11/2019 10:13:11 AM >


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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 4/11/2019 10:12:34 AM   
TJSweens


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Cheryl Reeve loads up on young talent.

The dynastic Minnesota Lynx found themselves in unfamiliar territory in 2018. Minnesota finished just two games over .500 and were quickly dispatched in the first round of the WNBA Playoffs. That’s not the ending the team with six conference titles and four WNBA championships since 2011 is used to.
2018 was a year of change for both the Lynx and the WNBA. Lindsay Whalen was lost to retirement. Maya Moore announced she was taking this season off. Rebekkah Brunson is dealing with potentially career-threatening concussion symptoms. If the need for youth and depth wasn’t already clear after last season, it was more than apparent entering the draft.
The Lynx’s needs were numerous. Brunson and Moore were their second and third-leading rebounders a season ago. Only Las Vegas took fewer three-pointers than Minnesota, who also finished eighth in three-point efficiency.
You don’t replace core pieces like Moore, Brunson or Whalen with one selection. It sometimes takes many players. With five total draft picks on Wednesday night, the Lynx were going to do all that they could to change their fortunes for 2019.
Napheesa Collier
Making a bad choice with the sixth overall pick in this draft was going to be difficult. The Lynx had too many needs and this draft was teeming with talent. Guard help would have been great but four of the first five picks off the board were guards. A front court or wing player would also have made good selections.
The Lynx were thrilled to see UConn’s Napheesa Collier available. At 6’2”, Collier brings size and rebounding to either forward spot. Watching her play and her ability to be in the right place and make the right play jumps out. There’s no debate whether she’s a small forward or power forward; she’s a basketball player.
Her new coach, Cheryl Reeve, said after the selection that Collier was a Swiss Army knife on the basketball court, highlighting her ability to do everything from score efficiently, deflect passes and rebound.
Reeve previously coached Collier in 2018 for Team USA during FIBA’s World Cup. “My experience with her at USA basketball gave me a really good look into who she is and what she’s capable of,” said Reeve.
The summer of 2018 allowed Collier to get a taste of Reeve as a coach. Reeve is a good coach who gets the most out of their players. She can be hard on her players at times but her players usually understand that she has their best interest in mind. Reeve will push Collier to be her best while understanding that she’s still learning.
“I’m going to work as hard as I can and soak everything in from the amazing players and the amazing coaches that I’m about to play for,” said Collier. ” I love this coaching staff and those players. I’m excited to get down there.”
If there is anything that Collier has proven other than a strong work ethic, it’s a reputation for coachability. Collier’s coaches pushed her as a Freshman with a poor defensive reputation to become the 2019 AAC Defensive Player of the Year (DPOY).
“I think it just shows that we have great coaches in that program and they just pushed me as far as I could go,” said Collier on Wednesday about her improvement. “It was something I did think that I was weak in so I tried to improve and dreams do come true getting the DPOY.”
Her coachability will help improve arguably her greatest weakness as a prospect: her shooting. Collier’s shooting track record in college is inconsistent but it’s something she’s focused on improving. She plans to spend the rest of the offseason refining her shooting mechanics to become more comfortable and consistent with her shot. This way, we hope to see more of the 43-percent 3-point shooter we saw in her Junior season than the 28-percent shooter we saw this year.
If there’s a weakness, it seems like Collier will do everything she can to turn it into a strength.
High standards
Collier, a four-year player for the Huskies, brings a proven track record of success to the Lynx. She played over 27 minutes per game at UConn, averaging 16 points and 8.1 rebounds per game on 61 percent shooting from the field. In her senior season, she posted averages of 20.8 points and 10.8 rebounds per game on 61.2 percent shooting
These numbers become more impressive when you consider her sub-30-percent 3-point shooting as a senior. She shot over 60 percent from the field despite making just 15-of-53 3-point attempts her senior year. Her remarkable efficiency led Reeve to place her among the Breanna Stewarts and Maya Moores of the league.
The former Husky is aware she is joining one of the WNBA’s most successful franchises. That’s familiar. Collier’s UConn teams reached the Final Four in each of her four seasons, including a 2016 National Championship. By joining the Lynx, Collier hopes to continue her winning tradition.
“It means a lot and shows that, not that other teams don’t but, the level of expectation they have for their program,” said Collier about joining a team like the Lynx. “Obviously, I’m used to that at UConn so I’m just going to go in there and work as hard as I can and do everything I can for the team.”
Having played with Stewart, Gabby Williams and Katie Lou Samuelson, she’s used to playing with other great players. “It’s gonna be amazing. That’s been my dream since I started watching her, so to know that she’s on that team and a part of that team means a lot,” Collier said of eventually playing with Moore. She also gets to practice with her former Team USA teammate, Sylvia Fowles, who Collier says will push her to be her best every day.
Collier has the potential to fill some of the minutes left by Moore and Brunson. There is also ample opportunity for her to carry her rebounding prowess to the team on Day 1. She’ll have her ups and downs like every rookie but it seems that Collier and the Lynx are a good match.
Second round shooters
The Lynx were in dire need of shooting entering Wednesday night. While none of the shooters at the top of the draft fell to them, the Lynx were able to acquire two by night’s end.
Natisha Hiedeman was taken with the 18th-overall pick and flipped to Connecticut in exchange for Lexie Brown. This is a fantastic price for a player the Sun had little use for last season, with major upside entering her second year. Brown’s numbers weren’t great as a rookie, but it is a very small sample size — playing just 5.6 minutes per game as a rookie in Connecticut — but her decorated college career tells a different story.
Brown, a 5’9 guard out of Duke, was a two-time AP All-American who averaged 18.5 points, 4.3 rebounds and 4.0 assists per game while hitting 38.5 percent of her 3-pointers in her collegiate career. Her prolific shooting was no small sample as she attempted 369 3-pointers and played an average of 34.3 minutes per game. The Sun just couldn’t figure out how to get her on the court, with Jasmine Thomas and Layshia Clarendon also at point guard.
Minnesota also selected Buffalo guard Cierra Dillard with the 20th-overall pick. Dillard’s rebounding was exceptional for her position, averaging over five per game in each of her final two seasons. It helps that her three-point stroke hovered above the 34 percent mark in that same time. She can also create her own shot, and will be an excellent fit in that locker room.
If the Lynx are lucky, they will have found a pair of steady-shooting guards who are capable of grabbing a few rebounds of their own, both also capable of running offenses. The Brown deal, in particular, was a low-risk and high-reward move that could make the team look very smart if she’s successful.
Shepard slides to 16
It’s a success anytime you can grab one of the best rebounders and most efficient players in the draft in the second round. That’s exactly what the Lynx did when Notre Dame’s Jessica Shepard fell to 16th overall. Lingering concerns over her conditioning and position on the floor prevented her from being a first-round pick.
Here’s the thing. If you’re a coach and can’t figure out how to use a 6’4” player that averaged an efficient 16.8 points, 9.2 rebounds and 3.3 assists per game, then something is wrong. Put a player like Shepard on the floor and she will find ways to contribute.
Finding value, like Shepard, throughout the second round was a common theme of the night for the Lynx.
Adapting to an evolving game
The Lynx seemingly recognized their weaknesses after the 2018 season. In almost no time at all, new contenders stood where they once did. Teams were younger, deeper and bombarded them with three-pointers.
What did the Lynx do on Wednesday?
They, too, became younger. They became more versatile, focusing on players with size and high basketball IQs that play multiple positions. The Lynx were able to add shooting in the second round at an affordable cost.
If a great team doesn’t recognize a shift in the game, it can get left behind. The league caught up and surpassed the Lynx in 2018. While losing Whalen, Moore and possibly Brunson will hurt, the Lynx found ways to replenish their talent pool, and have counterpunched with their roster.


https://highposthoops.com/2019/04/11/lynx-address-many-needs-in-smart-draft-wnba/

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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 4/12/2019 7:29:27 AM   
SoMnFan


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Minnesota Lynx
Draftees: No. 6 Napheesa Collier, UConn, 6-2 forward; No. 16 Jessica Shepard, Notre Dame, 6-4 forward; No. 20 Cierra Dillard, Buffalo, 5-9 guard; No. 30 Kenisha Bell, Minnesota, 5-9 guard
Evaluation: Lindsay Whalen has retired, Maya Moore is sitting out this season and the other members of the Lynx's championship core -- Seimone Augustus, Rebekkah Brunson and Sylvia Fowles -- are all north of 30. The Lynx know they have to get younger. Collier is a high-energy post player who will expand her game. Shepard can do a lot as a post, too. Rivals at UConn and Notre Dame the past two seasons, Collier and Shepard now could be the post duo of the future for Minnesota. Without Moore, the Lynx need scoring, and guards Dillard and Bell, if they make the squad, can help provide that. And the Lynx also used one of their draft picks, No. 18 Natisha Hiedeman, to trade to Connecticut for Lexie Brown, a second-year guard who could blossom with the Lynx.
Grade: A-plus
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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 4/12/2019 11:59:41 AM   
David Levine


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April 11, 2019 The New York Liberty has acquired guard Tanisha Wright from the Minnesota Lynx in a trade deal that also includes the Las Vegas Aces and Atlanta Dream.

The Liberty traded its second round pick in the 2020 WNBA Draft to the Minnesota Lynx in exchange for guard Tanisha Wright. In addition, New York traded guard Sugar Rogers to Las Vegas for the Aces’ second round pick in the 2020 draft. The Aces traded forward Nia Coffey to Atlanta.

"We want to thank Sugar for her dedication to the Liberty franchise over the years," said Liberty General Manager Jonathan Kolb. "She gave her all night in and night out and we wish her nothing but success in Las Vegas.
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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 4/12/2019 8:53:05 PM   
kgdabom

 

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I've been out of touch on the Lynx. Wow Maya Moore taking the season off. Hope she comes back to us next year. Great hype on the Lynx Draft this year.

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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 4/12/2019 9:16:26 PM   
David Levine


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quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

quote:

ORIGINAL: David Levine

Hmm.

Pick #16: Jessica Shepard (Notre Dame). Guard that attempted a total of three 3pt shots over the past 2 years.

Pick #18: Natisha Hiedeman (Marquette). Shot 40% on 3s last year. There's our shooter, but we traded her for Lexie Brown. The 9th overall pick last year who barely played (124 minutes over 22 games)

Pick #20 Cierra Dillard (Buffalo). Another Guard that is a career 34% 3pt shooter.

Pick #30 Kenisha Bell (Minnesota). Another non-shooter. Won't make the team, but was most likely drafted as a favor to Whalen.


She didn't play much ad a rookie, but Brown is a 3pt shooter.


She was behind two 2017 All-Star Guards on the Sun, so that could explain the lack of playing time.

Also cool: She's Dee Brown's kid.
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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 4/22/2019 4:51:42 PM   
David Levine


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The Lynx are replacing retired legend Lindsay Whalen with her nemesis

The Sparks agreed to trade guard Odyssey Sims, one of Minnesota’s most polarizing rivals, to the Lynx on Monday. L.A. received guard Alexis Jones in return.

https://www.sbnation.com/wnba/2019/4/22/18511059/lynx-trade-odyssey-sims-whalen-jones-sparks
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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 4/22/2019 8:54:09 PM   
TJSweens


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Wow, that really accelerates the reload. They are suddenly viable this year.

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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 5/26/2019 12:02:36 PM   
David Levine


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Hell of a debut for Collier.

27 points on 8/10 shooting. 3/4 from 3 and 8/11 from the line. Added 6 rebounds, 2 steals and 3 blocks.

2nd most points in a rookie debut. Only Candace Parker has more with 34.
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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 5/26/2019 12:21:33 PM   
TJSweens


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Nice to see Collier come out hitting the 3. Had she shot them at a high percentage her senior year, it's doubtful she would have been on the board when the Lynx picked.

Shepard's debut wasn't half bad either. Only 3 points, but 13 rebounds and 6 assists. Brown had 10 off the bench, so the young players contributed a lot.

All in all it looked pretty good. Big Syl and 4 new starters. They played a lot more up tempo than previous years.

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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 5/27/2019 11:21:23 AM   
kgdabom

 

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Amazing start for our top two draft picks. I got this article from Mike Cook and the Pioneer Press.

For the first time in close to a decade, the Minnesota Lynx tipped off their season with lots of uncertainty.
Rookies Napheesa Collier and Jessica Shepard ensured the first result looked familiar.
Collier, the team’s first-round draft pick, scored 27 points and grabbed six rebounds in her pro debut, Sylvia Fowles added 16 points and 10 rebounds, and the new-look Lynx pulled away to crush Chicago 89-71 Saturday night at Target Center.
Shepard, Minnesota’s second-round pick, had team highs with 13 rebounds and six assists to become the third player in league history to record at least 10 rebounds and five assists in her WNBA debut. Los Angeles’ Candace Parker and current Lynx forward Damiris Dantas are the others.
Her 13 rebounds are the most by any player in their WNBA debut since New York’s DeTrina White had 13 in 2004.
In league history, only Parker scored more points in her team debut (34) than Collier. Maya Moore, Seimone Augustus and Charde Houston held the previous Lynx record of 21.
“My goodness, did she raise the bar, and now we expect this every time she plays, right?” said coach Cheryl Reeve.
Collier was a late addition to the starting lineup. Karima Christmas-Kelly, signed in the offseason, missed the game with knee injury, as did Seimone Augustus. Both are day to day.
“I knew the team was counting on me, and I needed to go out there and play as aggressively as I can so I wouldn’t be a liability for the team,” Collier said.
“The rookies showed up and showed out,” said Fowles. “Especially Phee. She was told at last minute that she was going to be starting tonight, and she rose up with her play. Then you had Jess who came in and gave us some quality minutes.”
Reeve said Shepard has high expectations and is learning fast to meet those, all while being able to have the success she did in college, something many players struggle with.
“Everything you saw tonight, she’s been doing for us,” Reeve said.
“The confidence she has in us rookies that you can go in there and play comfortably and not be worried about making one mistake and coming out makes it a lot easier to play,” Shepard said.
Minnesota finished with a 46-29 advantage on the boards and outscored Chicago 20-4 in second-chance points.
Gone are Lindsay Whalen (retired), Maya Moore (taking season off) and Rebekkah Brunson (post-concussion symptoms), but Collier, the No. 6 pick in April’s draft, showed no tentativeness from the outset, aggressively charging the hoop and scoring 13 points in the first half, including six free throws. She had three blocks as well.
That continued after intermission. Fowles picked up her fourth foul early in the third quarter, and Collier keyed a 21-4 surge to put the game away.
Collier, who had eight points and four rebounds in the frame, had six points in the stretch and grabbed a missed free throw to set up two other points.
“The way that she scored in the paint is what we’re trying to get for her,” Reeve said. “She was asking for it too. We missed her on the first pass and she’s hollering, ‘Give it to me. Give it to me.’ She’s really had a great feel for what she was trying to get done.”
Danielle Robinson added six of her 11 points, including a nifty drive through three defenders that led to a left-handed layup to make it 64-44.
Minnesota led by as much as 27 points in the fourth quarter.


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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 5/28/2019 7:22:29 AM   
Bruce Johnson

 

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Sounds like the Lynx got younger. Hopefully they play with more energy and more active defense. Younger usually means more mistakes, too. I don't know much about basketball, though, as you can tell. Anyway, I wish the Lynx well.

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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 5/28/2019 9:07:22 AM   
TJSweens


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The Lynx did get younger. What should help in minimizing mistakes is that the key young additions, Collier and Sheppard, came out of great programs in college and with USA basketball.

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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 5/28/2019 10:32:11 AM   
kgdabom

 

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quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

The Lynx did get younger. What should help in minimizing mistakes is that the key young additions, Collier and Sheppard, came out of great programs in college and with USA basketball.

I think Brunson is done. Augustus is hanging by a thread. Fowles looks to have a few good seasons left and hopefully Maya returns next year. Maybe Collier turns out to be a legit star and this group can ride her and Fowles to the playoffs and beyond.

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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 5/29/2019 8:32:31 AM   
TJSweens


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Lynx, Storm are exhibit A for talent trends in WNBA
Lynx and Storm hit hard by injuries and absences.
By Kent Youngblood Star Tribune MAY 29, 2019 — 1:05AM

Wednesday night the Lynx will host the defending WNBA champion Seattle Storm.

The Lynx likely will be without Seimone Augustus again, and possibly Karima Christmas-Kelly; this on a roster that already looks so different from years past.

The Storm will be without veteran All-Star Sue Bird and last season’s MVP Breanna Stewart, both out because of injuries.

So fans can expect the game to be …

Skilled and athletic.

More than perhaps ever, the WNBA is less about its big stars and more about the improved level of play that the combination of a steadily improving talent flow and a league with just 12 teams has created.

“I think this is a chance for fans to see that depth and get themselves attached to somebody new,” Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve said.
She was talking about a spring, a new WNBA season, that has begun with so many big-name players out of action, either because of injury or personal decisions. Included among them: Bird, Stewart, Angel McCoughtry, Diana Taurasi and Candace Parker are all injured. Skylar Diggins-Smith recently had a baby, while Maya Moore is taking a year off.

Certainly the absences will affect certain teams’ chances of a championship. But don’t expect the quality of play in the league to suffer.

Much has been made recently of the need for the WNBA to expand, citing the quality of players who have been unable to make rosters.

A recent article on fivethirtyeight.com showed the talent pool’s depth, considering the number of girls and young women playing the sport and the fact that the league only has 144 jobs each year.

According to the article, in the 2018 season, 157 players total suited up for at least one game in the league. Compare that to the 412,407 girls’ basketball players in the country at the same time. That means one job for every 2,627 high school players. Compare that to the NBA, where there was one job for every 1,021 high school players.

That shows how hard it is to be on a WNBA roster and how many good players each of the 12 teams have.

“You’d rather have your stars, your faces of the league,” Reeve said. “But I don’t think you’ll see a drop-off in the quality of play. Yeah, obviously, we’ll prepare for Seattle in a different way. But if you think it will be easy without Bird or Stewart, you’re going to be making a huge mistake.”

The talent at the top of the draft goes up and down each year. But the big pipeline created by having more women playing the sport continues to elevate the league’s level of play. It wasn’t long ago that some first-round draft picks struggled to make a roster, not to mention a second-round pick. This season eight of the 12 second-round picks made a roster — including Minnesota’s Jessica Shepard, who had 13 rebounds in Saturday’s win over Chicago, the most by a league player in her rookie debut.

Lynx center Sylvia Fowles said the depth of talent in the league is the most impressive she’s seen in her decade-plus career.

“Most definitely,” she said. “I think these young ladies are getting faster, they’re more athletic. The 5s are stepping out beyond the three-point line. But yes, this is the most talent I’ve seen in my 12 years in the league.”

At the same time, a player such as Megan Gustafson — the Iowa star who was the Division I player of the year last season — was unable to make Dallas’ opening day roster.

Seattle won its season-opening game against Phoenix thanks in large part to the play of Jordin Canada, a second-year player. The Lynx routed Chicago thanks to Shepard and rookie first-rounder Napheesa Collier, whose 27 points is the second most in league history for a rookie debut.

“You’ve seen it for a while in our league where, when a player goes down, another player steps up,” Reeve said. “We’ve had that. But now, with this depth of talent? Each team has multiple talented people.”


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Post #: 3620
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 5/29/2019 7:52:32 PM   
David Levine


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Collier off to another strong start.

9 points (3-4 shooting, 1-1 from 3, 2-2 at the line), 3 rebounds and a block (unfortunately picked up her 3rd foul right before halftime) as we’re up 39-24 at the half.

Syl struggling on offense, but does have 11 boards.
Post #: 3621
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 5/29/2019 9:15:39 PM   
TJSweens


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Lynx win 72 - 61. 9 points was it for Collier. Dantas, Sims, Sheppard and Brown were all in double figures.

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RE: Minnesota Lynx - 5/30/2019 3:26:30 AM   
kgdabom

 

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An almost entirely new Lynx start the season 2-0 including a win over last years champion. Nice.

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Post #: 3623
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 5/30/2019 7:16:05 AM   
SoMnFan


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quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

Lynx win 72 - 61. 9 points was it for Collier. Dantas, Sims, Sheppard and Brown were all in double figures.

A different looking squad this year
But damn solid so far
Post #: 3624
RE: Minnesota Lynx - 5/30/2019 8:32:12 AM   
TJSweens


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quote:

ORIGINAL: SoMnFan

quote:

ORIGINAL: TJSweens

Lynx win 72 - 61. 9 points was it for Collier. Dantas, Sims, Sheppard and Brown were all in double figures.

A different looking squad this year
But damn solid so far


Keep in mind that Seattle was playing without Sue Bird and league MVP Breanna Stewart. What is definitely showing to this point is that the Lynx have a lot more team speed this year. They play a lot of pressure defense on the perimeter and push the pace. Defense will be their calling card more than ever. They held Seattle to 36% and 13% from 3 point range.

One bummer is that Simone Augustus just had a knee procedure at the Mayo Clinic is will be out for a while.

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"The eternal fate of the noble and enlightened: to be brutally crushed by the armed and dumb."
Post #: 3625
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