A season later, Seimone Augustus still hears about it.
The Lynx were in the fourth quarter of a Western Conference finals opening-game victory over Phoenix at Target Center when, near midcourt. Mercury guard Diana Taurasi passed the ball, then gave Augustus a little shove. Augustus turned and glared. Taurasi then slammed her shoulder into Augustus. The two were face to face when Taurasi leaned over and gave Augustus a peck on the cheek.
"It was either throw a punch or get a kiss," Augustus joked this week.
If you're looking for a way to describe the intense and sometime tempestuous relationship between these two teams, that is the moment: Love. Hate.
When the two teams meet again in the Western Conference finals starting Friday in Phoenix, it will be the third time in four years that the Lynx and Mercury have faced one another at this point. Among the 10 starting players are six players who were named to this summer's All-Star Game, four members of the 2012 gold medal-winning U.S. Olympic team and two MVPs (Taurasi in 2009 and Maya Moore of the Lynx this year).
These teams have a lot of respect and admiration for one another. But there is no better rivalry in this league.
"I'm sure they're good people," Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve said. "These guys know each other from playing overseas and stuff. But it's on now."
Before this season the Lynx, including playoffs, had won 14 straight games against Phoenix. But this year, one season after many tabbed the Mercury as the next big thing, things changed. With a stellar starting lineup and perfect health, the Mercury set a WNBA record with 29 regular-season wins, including three in four games against a Lynx team that battled health issues much of the year.