Archive for September, 2008

Finals Matchup Halfway Complete

Monday, September 29th, 2008

Congrats to the San Antonio Silver Stars, your 2008 Western Conference champions. The Silver Stars rallied down the stretch at the AT&T Center yesterday to defeat Los Angeles for the second time in 28 hours and advance to the WNBA Finals for the first time. One of the observers who was happiest for San Antonio was Storm Head Coach Brian Agler, who spent the last three years as an assistant with the Silver Stars.

“I’ve got a lot of friends in San Antonio and I know those players and I know there are some players there that have had great careers that haven’t won a championship. I know how much that would mean to them,” Agler said last Friday. “It’s obvious that because of my friendships with them, I would like to see them achieve their goals. But I also have a lot of respect for the other three teams too.”

Even though the Sparks were eliminated, I gained a lot of respect for their ability as a team during their postseason run. I really thought L.A.’s guard play and inconsistency would be a major problem, but at no point during the playoffs did the Sparks beat themselves. They simply lost to a better team on the road, with a couple of tough calls going against them.

Los Angeles figures to be even more dangerous next year. With Shannon Bobbitt having a year of experience and Temeka Johnson further removed from microfracture knee surgery (she looked a lot healthier post-Olympics), the point-guard spot should be more stable. Really, the Sparks’ offseason priority ought to be shooting guard, where Marie Ferdinand-Harris isn’t the floor-spacer the team needs and Raffaella Masciadri is too limited for heavy minutes. I’m not sure if Spaniard Marta Fernandez, very effective at times during her rookie season in 2007, could be in the mix next year.

As for the Finals, our matchup will be complete tonight. Detroit and New York play a winner-take-all Game 3 back at Eastern Michigan University tonight at 4:00 p.m. on ESPN2. If the game comes down to the closing minutes again, the Liberty needs to do a better job of executing on offense. It was also baffling how Janel McCarville could be on the bench at key points of the game. The Shock figures to be tough to beat in a deciding game.

Either winner will have a quick turnaround with Game 3 scheduled for Wednesday in San Antonio. The extra day of rest will come in handy for a Silver Stars team that could really use a healthy Helen Darling and/or Edwige Lawson-Wade to add depth and allow Becky Hammon some quick breathers.

What a Finish in San Antonio

Saturday, September 27th, 2008

In the NBA, the Los Angeles-San Antonio rivalry has Derek Fisher’s shot with 0.4 seconds left to win a key game in the 2004 Western Conference Semifinals. Now, on the same court, the WNBA has matched it with an equally improbable finish, Sophia Young’s desperation jumper with 1.8 seconds left that bounced high off the backboard, off the front of the rim and back off the backboard before finally settling into the net to give San Antonio a 67-66 win in Game 2 of the Western Conference Finals.

Watching the shot live via Webcast, it looked like the Silver Stars were doomed when it went a little long on the first carom. Young could shoot that shot 100 times and I’m not sure it would bounce in quite like that again.

So much was riding on that shot. As San Antonio took possession with 1.3 seconds left, it looked like the Silver Stars’ season was going to end on DeLisha Milton-Jones‘ layup moments earlier. With a win, the Sparks were headed to the WNBA Finals, while San Antonio needed the unlikely game score to force a Game 3 tomorrow. Now, the Sparks have to deal with a significant blow to their pysche and have only a little over 24 hours to do so because of the back-to-back games in the conference finals.

Los Angeles’ advantage is that the Silver Stars were so hard-pressed to contain Candace Parker and Lisa Leslie in this game. Parker had 19 points and a remarkable 17 rebounds, while Leslie added a double-double of her own with 17 points and 12 boards. This was a mirror image of much of the series with Seattle, with the stars carrying the Sparks while the role players save Temeka Johnson crumbled. I know Shannon Bobbitt is the better defender, but having the rookie running the show down the stretch instead of Johnson was mystifying. Bobbitt shot 2-for-12 from the field and was responsible for a costly shot-clock violation in the final minute.

San Antonio’s other big issue is backcourt injuries. Edwige Lawson-Wade left after rolling her right ankle and Helen Darling was limited and ultimately sidelined by a calf injury she’s been battling since the Olympic break. If both are out, the Silver Stars will have to rely heavily on their starters in a back-to-back set.

All of that sets up a fascinating winner-take-all Game 3 tomorrow at 2 p.m. on ESPN2 just after Detroit and New York play Game 2 of their Eastern Conference Semifinals series at Noon.

Conference Finals Picks

Friday, September 26th, 2008

Alas, recapping the Storm’s season left me with little time to work on previews of the conference finals, which kick off … well, actually about 20 minutes ago, but I haven’t looked at the L.A.-San Antonio score, so I’m still going to make my picks.

San Antonio in 2
In many respects, the Silver Stars can be considered a suped-up (read: healthy) version of the Storm. Both teams are outstanding on defense and can struggle at times on offense, not unlike the Sparks. I think San Antonio’s superior depth at this point of the season – especially if Edwige Lawson-Wade continues to offer a spark off the bench – will make the difference where the Storm fell just short.

Detroit in 3
The Libkids are certified playoff overachievers after extending the Shock to three games last year and taking out Connecticut in a first-round upset this season. Still, they’ll have their hands full with a Shock team that absolutely took Indiana apart in Tuesday’s Game 3. Even with Plenette Pierson’s status up in the air and Cheryl Ford long out, Detroit seems to be clicking. I think the Liberty can make things very interesting, but the Shock will ultimately prevail on their temporary homecourt at Eastern Michigan University.

Jackson Hasn't Thought About Free Agency

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

Hello from The Furtado Center, where the Storm is completing exit interviews today with Lauren Jackson and Yolanda Griffith meeting with Head Coach Brian Agler and CEO Karen Bryant.

Earlier, we had our first chance to speak to Jackson about her future. Because point guard Sue Bird is playing out the second year of a deal signed as a core player and teams are now limited to one core designation per season, Jackson cannot be cored and will be an unrestricted free agent for the first time in her WNBA career. (Previously, Jackson signed the three-year deal just completed as a restricted free agent.) Also a factor is whether Jackson decides at some point to take a WNBA season off to rest and let her body get healthier. Those decisions are coming, but Jackson wants time to ponder them.

“To be honest, I haven’t even thought about it,” she told reporters. “There’s a lot of things that will factor into my decision-making, but I haven’t even really thought about it. I’m just trying to get fixed and healed and get ready to get back on the court again.”

We’ll have more on Jackson’s status as well as a look ahead to 2009 for the Storm later tonight on storm.wnba.com, so stay tuned.

Cash Still Considering Her Options

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

As she enters her WNBA offseason, Seattle Storm forward Swin Cash has a decision to make with regards to her back, which has bothered her much of the last two seasons and became especially painful late in the 2008 regular season, forcing Cash to miss the Storm’s last three games and limiting her in the playoffs.

“I have a herniated disc that has been pressing on the sciatic nerve,” Cash explained to the media Wednesday. “For anyone who has that, it’s very painful.

“I’ve been able to control it most of the season, but something just kind of happened in that Minnesota game (on Sept. 6) that irritated it.”

Doctors advised Cash not to play in the Storm’s series against the Los Angeles Sparks, but she soldiered through the pain and contributed in a reserve role. Now, Cash is scheduled to head overseas to begin playing overseas for USK Praha in Prague (the same team Storm center Janell Burse played for the last three seasons before moving to Russia for this winter) in mid-October, meaning she must make a decision on what is in store within the next couple of weeks.

“I think, obviously, surgery could be an option,” said Cash. “Do you wait it out? Do rehab? Just a lot of different things. I’ve seen some of the best specialists in the country, got a lot of different opinions. I guess it’s pretty much me praying on it and determining what’s the best route to take right now. I’ve played and I feel like I’ve gotten a little bit better, so I don’t know if you want to jump right into surgery, if that’s the answer.”

If Cash did undergo surgery, she indicated the recovery time would be around 8-12 weeks with the possibility of an aggressive rehab schedule getting her back on the court sooner rather than later.

“It wouldn’t be something that would be drastic and keep me out for a long period of time,” Cash said.

Aside from the situation with her back, Cash has been looking forward to playing overseas after spending recent offseasons working out in the U.S. and broadcasting for ESPN.

“I obviously wanted to spend a little more time playing at a higher level,” she said. “I can train here and I can go play with the guys. In Miami, I played pickup, (partner) Chafie (Fields) and I and played with Ruth (Riley) sometimes when she was down there. But to get overseas and to get that high-level competition was what I really wanted to do to get me back to that level that I know I’m able to play at in this league consistently. That was the biggest reason why I wanted to go over there.”

- We had a chance to speak to 10 of the Storm’s 13 players today. Lauren Jackson will do her exit interview tomorrow, while Yolanda Griffith’s has yet to be scheduled. Sheryl Swoopes wished to speak to the media tomorrow, when Head Coach Brian Agler and CEO Karen Bryant will also wrap up the season.

- OK, the Kelly Santos story mentioned in my main story on the Storm’s disappointment and how much players enjoyed being teammates deserves more explanation. I’ll attempt to do it justice. When the Storm went down to Los Angeles for Game 1 of the playoff series, the team stayed in a different hotel than in the previous two trips to L.A. This will prove critical.

When the team arrived at LAX, Santos left to spend the evening with friends watching Brazilian movies. They brought her back to the hotel the team had stayed at previously, and Santos spent the night there. On Thursday morning, Santos went to the room of Equipment Manager Danielle Yellam to get her gear for practice only to get no answer at Yellam’s room number. After a phone call, Santos finally realized she was in the wrong place.

With little time to spare, Santos hightailed it over to the Storm’s new hotel via taxi and was able to make the team bus to practice. It was only then, Sue Bird explained, that teammates got inquisitive as to how Santos’ roommate (Kristen O’Neill) could allow such a mix-up. When O’Neill said Santos had never shown up, they got suspicious.

“After reviewing the whole story,” said Bird, “we’re like, ‘So, where did you stay last night?’”

That’s when Santos had to come clean about staying at the other hotel.

The great unresolved question of this whole story remains how Santos was able to check in to the other hotel and spend the night. Apparently she was told at the front desk that her team was staying there. What team? Impossible to say.

“Somebody there needs to be fired,” Bird joked. “How crazy is that? By far highlight of the year.”

Santos was a little less thrilled the story went public, saying with a grin that Bird was not her friend if she was telling everyone.

“I really work with nice people,” Santos said, glad Agler wasn’t upset. “Everything’s OK for them, it’s not a problem.

“So, that’s my story. I have to write a book.”

Share Your Thoughts

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

Looking at the comments in the last 12 hours, it looks like fans want a chance to talk about the season that was and share their thoughts, so let me provide a specific entry where you can leave your comments on the 2008 season.

Postgame Post Mortem

Wednesday, September 24th, 2008

The big thing I wanted to ask about after the game was the play with 32.4 seconds left where Sue Bird fouled Marie Ferdinand-Harris and sent her to the line with the Storm down three. Bird seemed angry after the play.

Some background. During the preceding timeout, we were able to catch some audio of Storm Head Coach Brian Agler on the radio broadcast, which was off air. It appeared Agler was ordering a foul. I was a little dubious of the strategy with more than enough time to get a stop and potentially get the ball back down three with a chance to tie.

On the inbounds pass, Tanisha Wright immediately fouled Sparks guard Shannon Bobbitt, putting the Storm at the limit. Then Los Angeles inbounded to Ferdinand-Harris and Bird applied pressure before being quickly whistled for a foul. It was possible that Bird hadn’t wanted to foul Ferdinand-Harris, an excellent free-throw shooter, but it occurred to me that the team might have wanted to defend straight up after the first foul.

Bird confirmed that notion. It seems possible that the referees might have anticipated the Storm intentionally fouling and gone quickly to the whistle. Ferdinand-Harris hit both shots and the Storm was forced to try to foul the rest of the way.

Bird still seemed a little shellshocked as she talked to reporters, uncertain quite how to react to some of the big-picture questions. She did make it clear that she refused to consider the season a failure because of what the Storm accomplished during a record-setting regular season.

Sheryl Swoopes was, inevitably, asked about her future. She didn’t have a firm answer, explaining that if she continued to feel good she would like to play another season. Swoopes was resolute that if she plays in 2009, it will be for the Storm.

The Storm will hold exit interviews over the next couple of days, and storm.wnba.com will have plenty more analysis looking back on the 2008 season and ahead to what is in store for the upcoming offseason.

Elsewhere …

Tuesday, September 23rd, 2008

While we await Game 3 of the Storm-Sparks series, a pair of series concluded with deciding games last night.

In Connecticut, the New York Liberty surprised the favored Sun and surprised me. Nothing against New York, but I really thought that Connecticut would come out of the Eastern Conference. Having not really seen much of the series, I’m not sure whether the Sun’s disappointing 12-of-55 three-point shooting was due to the Liberty’s defense or Connecticut’s offense. Either way, the three-heavy Sun could not survive the slump.

I’m a believer to some extent in the importance of experience in the postseason, but the Libkids are pretty clearly an exception at this point. Last year New York played way over its head by giving the Shock a first-round scare, and this year the Liberty pulled off the upset. Be wary, Detroit or Indiana.

After seeing Game 1, I also missed nearly all of the Sacramento-San Antonio series, which is a shame. I would have loved to see how the Monarchs earned a blowout win on the road in Game 2 and then forced OT last night. Whatever the team’s faults, Sacramento plays hard all the time, and that along with some timely shooting by Ticha Penicheiro and Nicole Powell put a scare into the Silver Stars.

Does the series being so much closer than expected reveal anything about San Antonio? My inclination is to say no. Last year, Detroit had an even more difficult time getting out of the first round and still came within one score of the championship. Sometimes, the matchups just aren’t right.

How about Edwige Lawson-Wade putting up a big game for the Silver Stars last night? Edwige was always a favorite during her brief time in the Storm, and now she’s translating her international success to the WNBA game. Mechelle Voepel highlighted Lawson-Wade and Liberty rookie Essence Carson in her postgame column.

Monday Practice Roundup

Tuesday, September 23rd, 2008

Does this look physical to you?
Aaron Last/Storm Photos

With the Storm practicing at The Furtado Center and the Sparks at the nearby KeyArena, the media had a chance to get the perspective from both sides going into tomorrow’s Game 2 (6:00 p.m., ESPN2, 1150 AM KKNW, TIX).

One of the major topics of the day was what is acknowledged to be the physical nature of this series, though we haven’t seen anything like Ebony Hoffman’s takedown of Plenette Pierson in Detroit that earned a Flagrant Foul. In fact, no Flagrants have been called in this series, and I don’t think any have been warranted. The media might be making a bit too much of the physicality angle, but both sides have been happy to play along and maybe try to work the officials a little bit.

“It’s just about welcoming it,” said Sparks forward Candace Parker, who compared the way the game was called yesterday to the more physical international style. “That’s the way they feel they can stop the Sparks is to be physical. I guess it’s our job to show them that it doesn’t matter. They were just as physical in Game 1 as they were here.”

“It’s been a physical series,” offered Sue Bird. “I think they’re a very physical team. For them to say we’re more physical is not really accurate. If anything, it’s equal. I think it’s two physical teams going against each other. I don’t know that one is more physical than the other.”

Most of the rest of the players and coaches were of the opinion that both teams are in fact physical.

“I think both teams are physical in two different ways,” said Storm Head Coach Brian Agler. “I’m not going to say how I think they’re physical, but I will say that I think we just try to stay in plays with people. We’re undersized at times and we have to stay in plays, we have to stay in position. At times we have to hold our ground. At times we have to really be mentally tough in how our ballhandlers are being guarded. I think that we have to keep our composure in regard to things that happen after the whistle blows.”

“Both teams are physical,” Tanisha Wright said. “Luckily, yesterday, the refs let us play too.”

Agler emphasized the importance of dealing with the style of the game and adjusting to the way it is refereed as a key to the outcome of Game 3. His counterpart, Michael Cooper, bristled at the suggestion that his team might need to be more physical Tuesday, suggesting that could backfire.

“We just have to be the smarter team,” he said. “Sometimes, physicalness can work against you, because if you’re too physical the officials are going to call it. You can play physical and play smart at the same time and be successful.”

Cooper and Parker also downplayed the importance of adjustments by the Storm in terms of explaining Los Angeles’ 15-point first half during Game 2. As is probably approriate in terms of preparing for the next game, the Sparks looked within to find an explanation to their struggle to score.

“I don’t think they forced anything on us,” said Cooper. “It was our inability to do anything. Their defense was what it was – the same defense they had in Los Angeles. We were just apprehensive about what we wanted to do with the basketball. But we’ll be ready to play tomorrow.

“We had some wide-open shots, the same we were getting in Los Angeles. We didn’t knock them down – we did in Los Angeles. That was the difference. When a team is not shooting well from the perimeter, it makes the defense get bigger and bigger than what it was. They’ve done nothing more than just play harder this last game.”

“If you look at the overall game, it was just us – it really was,” Parker added. “It was that we weren’t able to knock down open shots, we were turning the ball over. It wasn’t anything different that they did.”

Agler didn’t entirely disagree, saying, “I think a lot of it had to do with they missed some shots. I don’t know if you can count on that all the time. I think we saw how they’re capable of shooting down in L.A. Tomorrow’s just hard to say.”

I do think both sides glossed over the role of transition defense in the low-scoring first half. Part of the reason the Sparks guards were able to get going in the first half of Game 1 and have a big game was that the team got out and ran in the first quarter thanks to turnovers and missed shots by the Storm. In Game 2, L.A. had just three fast-break points in the first half and constantly had to play against a set defense. In addition to better ballhandling, the Storm’s decision to eschew the offensive glass in favor of getting back to defensively had a lot to do with that.

Other notes:
- After attempting to practice Saturday, as reported by the Seattle Times, Lauren Jackson was not dressed for Monday’s very light workout and film session.

“She was in here earlier than I got here,” reported Agler. “I think she just had a typical workout in the weight room.”

Bird was impressed by the fact that her teammate and friend would even attempt to come back early, saying, “It’s great. It just shows how competitive she is. It’s one thing to be sitting at home in Australia rehabbing, but I think when she’s here seeing this, it’s hard for her not to want to be on the court. I think after seeing Game 1, I’m sure she’s thinking to herself how much she could help, how much she wants to be out there. I think it’s great that she’s trying. I would never ever want to push her. I wouldn’t expect her to be able to play. It’s just way too soon. She hasn’t tested herself out enough.”

“I guess Willis Reed is the guy that’s been named a lot lately,” Bird later joked. “One shot – that’s all we’re asking. Make one and you can sit the rest of the game.”

- While the Storm’s rotation players were finished after doing some brief shooting, reserves Kimberly Beck, Shyra Ely, Katie Gearlds, Kristen O’Neill and Kelly Santos played 4-on-4 against the team’s practice squad to get some extra work and stay sharp. Agler used all 11 of his active players in Game 2 and said he expects to use a large rotation again in Game 3.

- Storm forward Swin Cash celebrated her 29th birthday at practice, saying a win tomorrow would make an ideal present.

PRACTICE AUDIO

- A one-one with Cash
- Agler
- Bird
- Wright
- Cooper
- Parker

Swoopes' Breakout Game

Monday, September 22nd, 2008

Terrence Vaccaro/NBAE/Getty Images

This was a game six months in the making. When the Seattle Storm signed Sheryl Swoopes in March, Head Coach Brian Agler was hoping for a performance like this. And when Swoopes decided to join the Storm and work to return from back surgery, it was with the big stage of the playoffs in mind.

It was a vintage effort on both ends of the floor from Swoopes in the Storm’s 64-50 Game 2 victory over the Los Angeles Sparks. She scored 16 points – one shy of her regular-season high – knocking down a pair of three-pointers, a bank effort and a trademark hit from NBA distance. At the other end, Swoopes reminded why she is one of the few players in the league who can take over a game defensively, playing the passing lanes and coming up with four of the Storm’s 10 steals. She came up with deflections or played a part in turnovers on several more plays.

“For me personally, I would say definitely this was one of the games that I wanted to have all year long,” Swoopes said afterwards. “To be able to come out and do it in the playoffs in a game like this obviously did a lot for me, but on top of that just for us to be able to walk out with the ‘W,’ that’s the most important thing.”

All season long, Swoopes has had to hear from the critics that she’s too old at 37, that she’s over the hill. Surely Swoopes is no longer the player she once was, but when you’re one of two players in the history of the WNBA to win MVP three times, there’s a lot of room to drop off and still be a very productive player. In the regular season, despite the occasional time she missed due to injury, Swoopes was still one of less than 50 players in the league I rated as worth at least two Wins Above Replacement Player.

The month since the Olympic break had been especially frustrating for Swoopes. An extremely painful heel injury cost her a game and a half. Just when Swoopes seemed to be getting going again, she suffered the freak concussion that finished her regular season.

Swoopes responded to every setback by redoubling her hard work. Fans saw Swoopes’ play on the court, but what few people realize is the extent of her dedication and hard work throughout the season. Swoopes spent hours before and after practice working on her game with the Storm coaching staff, putting up shots and getting in the kind of intense workouts that prepared her to play. Swoopes was motivated in no small part by the desire to, as she put it, not “be just another body on the floor.” Don’t underestimate Swoopes’ pride.

That some pride came into play going into this playoffs when Swoopes, watching at home during the Storm’s nationally-televised regular-season finale in L.A., heard ESPN2’s analysts question the team’s ability to win in the postseason without Lauren Jackson. More than anyone else on the Storm, Swoopes seemed to take that criticism personally and channel it into her performance.

“Especially when we went down the first game, a lot of people counted us out,” she reiterated today. “Even though we were playing at home, I don’t think a lot of people thought we could win this game.”

Swoopes’ performance was one of the biggest reasons the Storm silenced any critics. She came out strong, and so did the team.

Tanisha (Wright) said to me before the game started, ‘Sheryl, you have to be aggressive, you have to attack,’” Swoopes recalled. “She said the energy I had to start the game was kind of contagious and everybody else felt that.

“It doesn’t matter whether I’m scoring points or not – I feel like my leadership on the floor and getting out and being aggressive defensively and talking and trying to lead the team, I feel like that’s why I was brought here. If I’m putting points on the board, then that’s just a little extra.”

Swoopes’ experience will again be critical going into Tuesday’s winner-take-all Game 3 (6:00 p.m., ESPN2, 1150 AM KKNW, TIX). She’s been here countless times before, and I thought she struck the perfect note when she was asked by reporters whether she is confident about the game.

“Why not?” she responded. “L.A., again, they are a very good team. At the same time, I think every single player in this locker room feels like we have everything we need in order to beat them.

“Not only do we have to bring what we brought today, we’re going to have to bring a lot more. But I think we have what it takes to get it done.”

If Swoopes comes up with another big effort, like the triple-double (the first ever in the WNBA Playoffs) she unleashed on an unsuspecting Storm squad in Game 3 in the first round three years ago, it will be no surprise. Still, it might be tough to top today’s game. There have been any number of highlight performances in Swoopes’ playoff career, but I can’t help but suspect that because of all the extenuating circumstances this one might have been as satisfying as almost any she’s played.

“I couldn’t ask for a better situation or a better game than what I personally had today,” she said. “Hopefully I can bring that and a lot more on Tuesday, because we’re definitely going to need it.”