The Connecticut Sun eked out a thrilling 79-78 win over the defending WNBA champion Seattle Storm on Friday night. |
UNCASVILLE—Shekinna Stricklen scored a season-high 24
points, including two clutch free throws at the end of the game, to lead the Connecticut Sun to a 79-78 win over the Seattle Storm before 7,092 fans at the Mohegan Sun
Arena on Friday night. Seattle’s Natasha Howard led all scorers with 27 points,
while Jewell Loyd added 15 and Crystal Langhorne 14 for the Storm, who fell to
14-13. Besides Stricklen, who scored in double digits for the eighth time this
season, the Thomas girls, Alyssa (17) and Jasmine (11) scored in double digits
for the home team. Alyssa Thomas added 11 boards for her fifth double-double of
the 2019 campaign.
To call this one exciting doesn’t do the game justice. The
Sun led by four points, 21-17, at the first turn, but the Storm turned up the voltage
in the second period and took a 46-34 lead into the locker room at halftime.
The visitors kept it going immediately after intermission,
taking the largest lead of the contest, 61-48, late in the third. And that’s when
that certain something that championship caliber teams finally kicked in. The
Sun finished the third stanza outscoring the defending WNBA champs by eight
points to cut the visitors’ lead to five at the third turn, making it very much
a game.
Stricklen led the third period charge with a nine-point explosion.
But the game was still up for grabs at the fourth turn, and it was imperative that
the Sun keep up the heat in the final quarter. And that’s exactly what they
did.
However, Seattle was able to hold on to the lead for most of
the fourth stanza until the Sun, down by seven with 1:47 to play, went on their
winning run. During that stretch, Alyssa Thomas had two points, a block and a
steal, Courtney Williams had two steals and Shekinna Stricklen had a steal and calmly
dropped in two from the charity stripe with the Sun down by one and just 4.3
ticks left in regulation to seal the deal for Connecticut.
“What do you say? Gritty, gutty, ugly, pretty—lots of
adjectives [to use],” said a relieved Sun head coach Curt Miller after his team
eked out the victory. “Maybe the basketball God's looking down. A lot of 50/50
calls were going our way tonight. We rode our starters the entire second half—challenged
them to muster up energy, which is not easy after a three-game West Coast road
trip.” In fact, this was Connecticut’s first game back home after four road
contests—New York, Minnesota, Las Vegas and Phoenix. The Sun were 2-2 on that grueling
trip.
Miller went on to note that his team, renowned for its
defense, was on pace to hold Seattle to under 70 points for three quarters but
was undermined by a 29-point second-period performance by the Storm. He attributed
that to fatigue.
“You could feel it in the first quarter, which I shared with
them,” added Miller. “We were trading too much, and I knew our energy wasn't
where it was supposed to be. And when we started to miss some shots in the
second quarter… what I was feeling in the first quarter really came true.”
But, as is usually the case, it was defense that ultimately
paved the way to victory for Connecticut. Miller pointed to 27 turnovers as
they key factor in his team’s victory.
“I'm just really, really proud of them,” he continued. “How
they came through there at the end and a second half that they were able to
compete in.”
Seattle, which was playing without UConn superstars Sue Bird
and Breanna Stewart—both out for the season with injuries, was led by Natasha
Howard with a double-double (11-for-15 from the field for 27 points, to go
along with 10 rebounds). Jewell Loyd and Crystal Langhorne added 15 and 14
points respectively for the defending champs, who fell to 14-13. While Bird and Stewie were not playing, another former Husky star,
Kaleena Mosqueda-Lewis, was active and scored five points and grabbed on
rebound for Seattle (aka "UConn West").
For Connecticut, Stricklen’s 24-point performance included three
from beyond the arc. The Thomas girls—Alyssa and Jasmine—both scored in double
digits with 17 and 11 points respectively. Seattle out-rebounded the home team
by a 35-20 margin. Alyssa Thomas, however, was the game’s leading rebounder,
grabbing 11 boards.
“We got aggressive on defense,” said Stricklen, describing
her team’s fourth-quarter comeback. “[Alyssa Thomas] made some steals, Courtney
[Williams] got some steals down the stretch. I mean, we had to start pressuring
and we made them turn it over. I think they got a little rattled the last
minute and then we got a good call at the end. And then [we] got two free
throws and made them and AT sealed the game with a steal."
The Sun also had a season-high 19 steals—including 10 in the
fourth quarter. Jonquel Jones, who scored nine points, had three steals to
boost her career total to 102 swipes.
With the win, the Sun, who are in second place in the WNBA
standings—one game behind the Washington Mystics—improved to 18-8, while the
Storm, ranked No. 6 in the league, fell to 14-13. Next up for the Sun will be a
home game against the Dallas Wings on Sunday. Tip-off is at 3 p.m., and the
game will be televised on NESN+ and streamed on WNBA
League Pass.
Sun To Honor Whalen
Former Sun star Lindsay Whalen (left) will be honored on Friday night when the Sun entertain Las Vegas. |
This coming Friday, Aug. 23, the Sun
will celebrate the career of WNBA legend Lindsay Whalen on August 23 when they entertain the Las Vegas Aces at 7:30 p.m. Whalen’s No. 13 will join Margo Dydek
(12), Nykesha Sales (42) and Katie Douglas (23) in the rafters during a special
ceremony at. Whalen, who led the Sun to their two WNBA Finals appearances in
2004 and 2005, will also participate in a special question and answer session,
moderated by LaChina Robinson, after the ceremony on court. Joining Whalen will
be former teammates Douglas and Sales.
Whalen is the winningest
player in WNBA history, playing on a winning team in 325 WNBA regular season
games. Her 2,348 assists rank third in WNBA history. A Minnesota native, Whalen
went on to win four WNBA championships with
her home-state Lynx (along with UConn legend Maya Moore) after leaving the Sun.
Whalen, a five-time All-WNBA
honoree, won two Olympic gold medals (2012, 2016) and two World Championship
gold medals (2010, 2014) as a member of USA Basketball. She is currently head
women's basketball coach at her alma mater, the University of Minnesota.
—with staff reports
#ctsun #wnba #lindsaywhalen #shekinnastricklen @seattlestorm
No comments:
Post a Comment