Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve has a philosophy. To her, it is very, very difficult to find a bad Seimone Augustus shot. Whether it means shooting a jumper, driving off a crossover, hitting her patented floater or posting up a shorter guard, Reeve is almost always of the opinion that Augustus should shoot more.
"Matter of fact, it's when she's not assertive that we kind of jump on her a little bit," Reeve said.
Which is just what happened in Sunday's victory at San Antonio, in the second half of a one-point game. Reeve had pulled Augustus from the game early in the third period because she was deferring too much.
Reinserted into the game late in the quarter, Augustus scored on three consecutive possessions, two layups with a jumper in-between, in the final 79 seconds of the quarter, a personal 6-0 run. Augustus finished with a season-high 25 points.
Perhaps obscured a bit by Maya Moore's blazing start to the season is that Augustus is also off to one the best starts of her career. She is shooting 55.6 percent overall, her best ever, including 59.8 percent on two-point shots. Her 19.1 scoring average is fourth best in the league and her highest since 2009.
This is somewhat out of necessity.
The Lynx started the season without three of their top seven players in their rotation because of injuries to Rebekkah Brunson, Devereaux Peters and Monica Wright. Brunson is gone probably until after the All-Star break. Peters has been back for two games, but is playing sparingly. Wright is improving and could return in about a week.
But, without them, all three of the Lynx stars have done more. Both Moore (27.6) and guard Lindsay Whalen (16.3) are averaging career highs in points. Moore is leading the league, Whalen is 10th.