Tuesday, not long after finding out she had gotten more WNBA All-Star Game votes than anybody else, Maya Moore talked about the latest of many honors that have come her way.
"It's great to be honored and appreciated by people across the world," said Moore before the Lynx game with Los Angeles at Target Center. "I want to make sure I'm playing as well as the accolades I'm getting.''
She is.
Struggling with her shot much of the night, Moore helped lead a fourth-quarter explosion that turned a three-point deficit into an 83-72 Lynx victory. Moore scored 16 of her 30 points in the fourth quarter, hitting five of six shots, all five of her free throws and a late three-pointer — her only one of the game — to seal the deal as the Lynx (14-6) improved to 8-1 at home.
Unlike Sunday, when the Lynx sputtered late in a loss in New York, the Lynx came together and got tougher in this one after the Sparks (7-11) ended the third quarter on a 9-0 run to take a three-point lead into the final quarter.
"I loved how hard we played, how tough we played," coach Cheryl Reeve said. "We liked that, when we got down, how we responded. We got closer, tougher as a group. We wanted our trust in each other to go up a notch, and that's what happened.''
Leading the way was guard Lindsay Whalen. On a night when the Lynx struggled to rebound — the Sparks had an incredible 20-1 edge in offensive rebounds — she came one rebound away from her second points-rebounds double-double as a Lynx.
"We weren't as tough as we needed to be [in New York]," she said. "Tonight we wanted to be as tough as possible."