By halftime, Lexie Brown had played 71 seconds.
She'd gone in to start the second quarter, played 1:11 and gotten pulled, with Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve demanding more defense.
In an 81-73 victory Sunday over Indiana at Target Center, in front of an announced 8,833 fans, Brown became the epitome of a Lynx team now finishing what it starts.
Brown scored 10 points in a span of 8:11 as the Lynx went from down six late in the third to being up 10 mid-fourth. Minnesota (17-15) finished a 4-0 homestand and kept a half-game lead over Seattle for sixth place in the WNBA with two games left.
Sunday began with the emotion of Seimone Augustus returning to the starting lineup for the last home game of the season and ended with the Lynx throttling the Fever, which had played well since beginning to feature center Teaira McCowan.
"It's certainly growth," said Reeve of a team that had struggled to finish games. "In our struggles earlier, you learn so much about yourself."
What works and what doesn't, for example. Which personnel groups work best.
The Lynx, whose four-game winning streak makes them the WNBA's hottest team, have pared down their game plan.