Friday, September 5, 2014

Allie Quigley-led Sky oust Fever in 3 games, headed to WNBA Finals

Final

Sky 75

(15-19, 6-11 away)

Fever 62

(16-18, 7-10 home)




7:00 PM ET, September 3, 2014
Bankers Life Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, IN

1 2 3 4 T
CHI 15 22 15 2375
IND 11 18 16 1762
Top Performers
Chicago: A. Quigley 24 Pts, 1 Reb, 2 Ast
Indiana: E. Larkins 9 Pts, 11 Reb, 1 Ast, 1 Stl
 
 
 
 
Associated Press
Sky Close Out Fever
The Sky beat the Fever 75-62 in Game 3 to advance to the WNBA Finals to face the Phoenix Mercury.

INDIANAPOLIS -- With a trip to the WNBA Finals on the line, Allie Quigley came through when her Chicago Sky teammates needed her the most.
Quigley scored 24 points and hit several big shots to help lead the Sky to a 75-62 victory over the Indiana Fever on Wednesday night in Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals.
She had 10 of her points in a key second quarter stretch that gave Chicago the lead for good. And with the Fever still hanging on late in the fourth quarter, Quigley drained a 3-pointer and hit free throws that led to a Sky celebration on Indiana's home court, ending the coaching career of Hall of Fame Fever coach Lin Dunn.
"It came down to hitting shots in the moment, relishing the moment," said Quigley, who was the WNBA sixth woman of the year. "I just wanted to be aggressive and if it was going to be my night to be the big player, I was ready for it."
Now the Sky, who made the playoffs for the first time ever last season before getting knocked out by Indiana in the first round, will face Phoenix in the Finals which start on Sunday.
Chicago dropped the first game in Indiana before winning the last two. Quigley said the Sky's game plan was simple for the decisive game -- contain Tamika Catchings and avoid falling behind early. They succeeded on both accounts, limiting Catchings to nine points and using a pressuring defense from the outset to prevent Indiana from finding an early offensive flow -- or any flow.
Indiana struggled to put together solid offensive stretches outside the one that put the Fever ahead 17-16 on a Marissa Coleman 3-pointer with 7:06 left before halftime. That was the Fever's only lead of the night, and they held it for just 14 seconds.
Executing the game plan early set the tone for the Sky. But Chicago wasn't overly impressive outside keeping Catchings at bay and riding its defense to a victory.
The Sky simply took advantage of 11 Indiana turnovers that they turned into 14 points, and they also capitalized on timely mental errors from the Fever.
On the final play of the first half, Courtney Vandersloot scored with 1.3 second to go on a layup in transition off an Indiana giveaway. That pushed Chicago's advantage to 37-29 at the break.
Chicago was able to maintain its lead in the third quarter, despite not having Elena Delle Donne on the floor for most of the period. She began getting attention from the Sky trainer with 5:15 left in the first half, and a lingering back injury sidelined her to begin the second half.
Even with Delle Donne on the bench, Indiana's struggles continued. Trailing 39-33, Briann January committed a foul that lead to two Tamera Young free throws with 4:09 left in the third, stalling the momentum Indiana appeared to be gaining.
Chicago's Epiphanny Prince found herself converting two free throws after a clear path foul was called against Indiana. And with 1:51 left in the third quarter, Indiana's Maggie Lucas was called for a foul against Quigley as the shot clock expired.
"Everything for us seemed to be a struggle," Dunn said. "Slow defensive rotations, a bad pass, not being ready to knock down open shots and hesitation."
While the Sky prepares for a Game 1 showdown Sunday at Phoenix, Dunn and the Fever are left wondering how they dropped the final two games of the series and missed an opportunity to advance to the WNBA Finals for a third time.
"(Chicago) played with a sense of urgency," Dunn said. "I could sense that in them, a desperation to get to the finals. And I'm excited about the Chicago Sky representing the Eastern Conference."
Copyright by STATS LLC and The Associated Press
 
 
 

Playoff Series

Series starts 8/30
Sat 8/30 @IND 77, CHI 70Recap | Box Score
Mon 9/1 @CHI 86, IND 84Recap | Box Score
» Wed 9/3 CHI 75, @ IND 62Recap | Box Score
 

WNBA Playoff Scoreboard for the game(s) of September 3,2014 from ESPN.GO.COM

Final
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • T
(15-19, 6-11 away)
  • 15
  • 22
  • 15
  • 23
  • 75
(16-18, 7-10 home)
  • 11
  • 18
  • 16
  • 17
  • 62
 SkyFever
PtsQuigley24Zellous16
RebFowles7Larkins11
AstVandersloot92 tied3
EASTERN CONFERENCE FINALS - GAME 3 - SKY WIN SERIES 2-1

Diana Taurasi leads Mercury to decisive Game 3 win over Lynx

Final

Lynx 78

(25-9, 10-7 away)

Mercury 96

(29-5, 16-1 home)




10:00 PM ET, September 2, 2014
US Airways Center, Phoenix, AZ

1 2 3 4 T
MIN 21 21 25 1178
PHX 28 22 22 2496
Top Performers
Minnesota: L. Whalen 20 Pts, 8 Reb, 6 Ast
Phoenix: D. Taurasi 31 Pts, 5 Reb, 7 Ast, 1 Stl, 1 Blk
 
 
 
 
Associated Press
Mercury Advance To WNBA Finals
Diana Taurasi scored 31 points as the Mercury defeated the Lynx 96-78 to advance to the WNBA Finals for the first time since 2009.

PHOENIX -- Diana Taurasi has always had a knack for playing her best in the biggest games.
Taurasi scored 31 points, including hitting a 50-footer at the end of the third quarter, to lift the Phoenix Mercury to a 96-78 win over the Minnesota Lynx on Tuesday night in the decisive game of the Western Conference finals.
Taurasi improved to 7-0 in her career in winner-take-all games.
"There is no player in the world I would rather have on my team," Mercury coach Sandy Brondello said.
Down eight points at the half, Minnesota clawed back to tie the score at 67 before Taurasi took over. She hit a jumper and then connected on her shot from the other side of halfcourt to give the Mercury a five-point lead heading into the fourth quarter.
She then scored the first eight points of the fourth to put the game away and give Phoenix an 80-67 lead with 7:19 left. Minnesota had eliminated Phoenix in the 2011 and 2013 en route to winning the title.
"For the most part, going in to the last couple of minutes of the third, they got the momentum, they were playing well, they were feeling good, they were making us feel uncomfortable," Taurasi said. "Couple of plays turns that."
Taurasi said she hadn't made many halfcourt shots in practice.
"I never make them, I don't think I have made one all year," Taurasi said. "I'll miss them all year to make that one."
Brondello noted the shot got the crowd back in the game after Minnesota had erased a double-digit lead in the final 90 seconds of the third.
"When anyone makes a big shot like that, you just think, OK, it's our night," Brondello said. "The look in their eyes, we just knew."
The Mercury, which had the best record in the league, will face the winner of Wednesday's Chicago-Indiana game.
"I thought that Phoenix played great, they were hard to play against," said Minnesota coach Cheryl Reeve, who was ejected after receiving two technical fouls with 1:58 left. "It's not like we played that bad. I got a good team. I thought that we just didn't get done some things we were trying to do on [Brittney] Griner and then Dee. I saw Dee before the game and I told our staff, 'Dee's got a bounce in her step."
Minnesota, which had made the WNBA Finals the past three seasons, missed its first 10 shots of the fourth, falling behind 85-67 midway through the quarter.
Seimone Augustus had 13 of her 21 points in the third quarter as the Lynx erased a 10-point deficit. Lindsay Whalen had 20 points, eight rebounds and six assists but missed four straight shots to start the fourth quarter.
"Taurasi hits a halfcourt shot, tough shot, that was momentum, that was a momentum play for them," Whalen said. "After that we had a hard time getting stops, we started taking tough shots, they weren't falling, the shots that were falling in the first, weren't."
Maya Moore had 16 points on 6-of-14 shooting.
"We put a lot of pressure on Lindsay, Seimone and Maya to have to make plays," Reeve said. "I got nothing out of my post players. That was unfortunate from an offensive standpoint."
Whalen, Augustus and Moore scored 57 of the Lynx's 78 points. Center Janel McCarville was held scoreless and Rebekkah Brunson had four points and eight rebounds.
Phoenix outscored Minnesota 56-34 in the lane.
"We just had an aggressive mentality tonight," Brondello said. "I thought in the second game we did not and tonight we went back to doing what we do best."
Griner had 22 points, six rebounds and four assists for Phoenix. DeWanna Bonner and Candice Dupree each added 14 for the Mercury.
Phoenix, 29-5 during the regular season, has not been in the finals since winning the title in 2009. The Mercury have won 18 straight home games, last losing to San Antonio on May 23.
Copyright by STATS LLC and The Associated Press
 
 
 

Playoff Series

Series starts 8/29
Fri 8/29 @PHX 85, MIN 71Recap | Box Score
Sun 8/31 @MIN 82, PHX 77Recap | Box Score
» Tue 9/2 @PHX 96, MIN 78Recap | Box Score
 

WNBA Playoff Scoreboard for the game(s) of September 2,2014 from ESPN.GO.COM

Final
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • T
(25-9, 10-7 away)
  • 21
  • 21
  • 25
  • 11
  • 78
(29-5, 16-1 home)
  • 28
  • 22
  • 22
  • 24
  • 96
 LynxMercury
PtsAugustus21Taurasi31
Reb2 tied8Bonner7
AstWhalen6Taurasi7
WESTERN CONFERENCE FINALS - GAME 3 - MERCURY WIN SERIES 2-1

Monday, September 1, 2014

Sylvia Fowles leads Sky past Fever in 2OT to even East finals

Final/2OT

Fever 84

(16-18, 9-8 away)

Sky 86

(15-19, 9-8 home)



4:00 PM ET, September 1, 2014
Allstate Arena, Glenview, IL

1 2 3 4 OT 2OT T
IND 18 21 13 19 8 584
CHI 16 15 17 23 8 786
Top Performers
Indiana: E. Larkins 15 Pts, 11 Reb, 2 Ast, 1 Stl, 2 Blk
Chicago: S. Fowles 27 Pts, 7 Reb, 3 Stl, 3 Blk



Associated Press
Sky Tie Series In 2OT Thriller
Elena Delle Donne tallied nine points as the Sky scored an 86-84 double-overtime victory over the Fever.

ROSEMONT, Ill. -- Courtney Vandersloot and her Chicago Sky teammates would prefer to take the lead early on. Instead, they have been rallying from big deficits in the WNBA playoffs.
In their latest game, Sylvia Fowles scored 27 points to help the Sky overcome a 14-point deficit to outlast the Indiana Fever 86-84 in double overtime on Monday, evening the best-of-three Eastern Conference finals.
The Sky rallied from 14 points down in Game 1 before falling to the Fever 77-70. Chicago also beat Atlanta in the decisive Game 3 of the first round after trailing by 20 points.
"We would all love to be the team that pushes out to the lead," Vandersloot said. "But at this point, when it happens, this is playoffs. That's an experienced basketball team over there. We just need to know we've been in this position before and that's one thing that keeps us together. We've done it before and we're just going to keep pushing."
Game 3 is Wednesday in Indianapolis. The winner will face either defending champion Minnesota or Phoenix in the finals.
Vandersloot had 18 points and Allie Quigley added 16 for the fourth-seeded Sky, who earned their first home playoff victory. Both of Chicago's victories in the first round against Atlanta came on the road.
"It's second nature for them to bounce back and stick together and feed off each other," Sky coach Pokey Chatman said.
All-Star Elena Delle Donne had just nine points on 4-for-11 shooting but her layup gave the Sky a four-point lead with 1:41 left in the second overtime. Chatman said Delle Donne dealt with tightness in her back.
Shavonte Zellous scored 20 points, Tamika Catchings had 16 and Erlana Larkins added 15 for the second-seeded Fever, the 2012 WNBA champions who are trying to reach the finals for the third time in six years.
"All they lack is playoff experience, and they're getting that now," Fever coach Lin Dunn said.
Though Fowles overcame early foul trouble and was dominant against a smaller team, backcourt play proved the difference for Chicago. While the Fever's guards won the matchup in Game 1, the Sky's guards triumphed in Game 2.
Indiana's Briann January had eight points after scoring 19 in Game 1. For Chicago, Quigley and Vandersloot combined for 34 points on 11-for-25 shooting and 10 assists.
"They've got to be shooting over us, not going by us," Dunn said. "It'll be a battle of the backcourts, and everybody else will be on Sylvia. And then who's got Delle Donne?"
Fowles picked up her third foul with 6:34 left before halftime. With Fowles out, the Fever extended their lead from six to 14. She scored 21 points after halftime.
"She didn't melt on screens, she didn't disappear. She stayed aggressive," Chatman said. "We fed the monster. She was in beast mode in every aspect of it."
The Sky dropped to 9-33 all time against the Fever, including a sweep by Indiana in the first round last year.
"They know this means nothing if they don't complete the deal in a couple days," Chatman said.
The Sky went on a 10-0 run to pull within one in the third. Delle Donne hit a 3 with 6:15 left in regulation for the Sky's first lead since the first quarter.
Delle Donne's jumper rattled in and out with under 4 seconds left in regulation, but Tamera Young rebounded and scored to tie it with 1 second left.
In the first overtime, Catchings' jumper tied it at 79 with 58.1 seconds left. Fowles was called for an offensive foul about 9 seconds later. After a miss by Catchings, she stole the ball, but January missed a jumper before the buzzer.
In the second overtime, January made two free throws with 12.2 remaining to cut the lead to one before Fowles hit a free throw for the final margin with 8.8 seconds left. Zellous missed a jumper before time expired.
Copyright by STATS LLC and The Associated Press
 
 
 
 

Playoff Series

Series starts 8/30
Sat 8/30 @IND 77, CHI 70Recap | Box Score
» Mon 9/1 @CHI 86, IND 84Recap | Box Score
Sep 3, 2014 CHI @ IND7:00 PM ET

Updated WNBA Playoff Scoreboard for the game of September 1,2014 from ESPN.GO.COM

As of 12AM,EDT/9PM,PDT





Final/2OT
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • OT
  • T
(16-18, 9-8 away)
  • 18
  • 21
  • 13
  • 19
  • 13
  • 84
(15-19, 9-8 home)
  • 16
  • 15
  • 17
  • 23
  • 15
  • 86
 FeverSky
PtsZellous20Fowles27
RebCatchings14Young9
AstJanuary63 tied5
EASTERN CONFERENCE FINALS - GAME 2 - SERIES TIED 1-1

Maya Moore scores 32 as Lynx force Game 3 against Mercury

Final

Mercury 77

(29-5, 13-4 away)

Lynx 82

(25-9, 15-2 home)


3:30 PM ET, August 31, 2014
Target Center, Minneapolis, MN

1234 T
PHX2222181577
MIN927202682
Top Performers
Phoenix: D. Taurasi 23 Pts, 6 Reb, 5 Ast
Minnesota: M. Moore 32 Pts, 9 Reb, 2 Ast, 3 Stl


Associated Press
Moore, Lynx Force Game 3
Maya Moore scored 32 points to lead the Lynx past the Mercury 82-77.

MINNEAPOLIS -- After playing her worst game of the season, Maya Moore recovered to keep the Minnesota Lynx season alive.
The league's MVP scored 13 of her 32 points in the fourth quarter as the Lynx avoided elimination by beating the Phoenix Mercury 82-77 in Game 2 of the Western Conference finals on Sunday.
Diana Taurasi scored 23 for the Mercury, who will host Game 3 on Tuesday night.
Phoenix jumped out to a 22-9 lead after the first quarter, and after a dominant showing in Game 1, the Mercury had the three-time defending Western Conference champions on the ropes. But Moore, who was held to nine points on 3-for-9 shooting in the opener, said she trusted the process that made her team the best in the league over her four-year career.
"We always believe in each other, and if we stick to what we're doing, something's eventually going to break," Moore said. "Because we're going to keep running it hard, trusting what we're doing, with discipline."
Tied at 75 with 23.3 seconds left, Seimone Augustus hit a 15-foot jumper and was fouled by DeWanna Bonner. Augustus, who finished with 23 points, converted the three-point play, and after Candice Dupree missed a 15-footer on the other end, Moore hit two free throws to put it out of reach for the Lynx.
Moore was an even bigger part of the comeback early in the fourth, as she hit three 3-pointers in a 13-0 Lynx run that gave them their first lead since they scored the first point of the game. Moore hit back-to-back 3's to pull Minnesota to within 65-62, and after Tan White made two free throws, Augustus scored down low to put Minnesota on top.
Then, with Little League World Series sensation Mo'ne Davis on hand cheering her on, Moore then drained her fifth 3-pointer of the game to send the sellout crowd into a frenzy.
"I think she had the mindset that she's the best player in the league and that nobody can stop her," Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve said of Moore's dominant fourth quarter. "I think maybe she had a stretch in Game 1, not that she doubted that but she just didn't play with the assertiveness that we're accustomed to seeing."
Fellow UConn graduate Taurasi also has grown accustomed to seeing Moore score at will.
"She made a lot of shots tonight and when she does that it's pretty much impossible to guard her," Taurasi said. "You pretty much put everyone on her, but you can't do that because they've got Seimone, they've got Lindsay (Whalen)."
Minnesota dug itself an early hole and almost didn't recover. The Lynx made just 2 of 14 field goal attempts in the first quarter as they fell behind 22-9 after 10 minutes.
But with Moore and Augustus struggling, Whalen put the Lynx on her back. Whalen scored 12 of her 17 points in the second quarter and hit five mid-range jump shots as Minnesota recovered its shooting touch to make 47 percent of its shots the rest of the way.
"It can be really demoralizing to be missing shot after shot after shot and scoring nine points in a quarter," Reeve said. "We really needed to hang in there and not get our heads down. That's a credit to leadership, a credit to Lindsay Whalen in particular."
Phoenix got 18 points and nine rebounds from Dupree, while Brittney Griner scored in 14 and Erin Phillips chipped in 10 off the bench. And despite letting a 13-point lead slip away, Taurasi said the Mercury could take plenty of positives out of the loss.
"I think for 35 minutes we were pretty good today," Taurasi said. "We'll just do what we do every single game, same mindset. Everyone was fine in the locker room. No one was crying, so I think we'll be ready."
Copyright by STATS LLC and The Associated Press

Playoff Series

Series starts 8/29
Fri 8/29@PHX 85, MIN 71Recap | Box Score
» Sun 8/31@MIN 82, PHX 77Recap | Box Score
Sep 2, 2014MIN @ PHX10:00 PM ET

WNBA Playoff Scoreboard for the game of August 31,2014 from ESPN.GO.COM

Final
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • T
(29-5, 13-4 away)
  • 22
  • 22
  • 18
  • 15
  • 77
(25-9, 15-2 home)
  • 9
  • 27
  • 20
  • 26
  • 82
 MercuryLynx
PtsTaurasi23Moore32
RebDupree9Brunson10
AstTaurasi5Whalen7
WESTERN CONFERENCE FINALS - GAME 2 - SERIES TIED 1-1