The Lynx traded for Sylvia Fowles on July 27. The deal paid off at about 9:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 22.
With impassioned play from Lindsay Whalen and Devereaux Peters, the Lynx had taken several large leads against the L.A. Sparks in the decisive game of the Western Conference WNBA semifinals.
Early in the fourth quarter, the Sparks cut the lead to one. At that point, Fowles had made her presence felt mostly by taking the ball out of bounds after allowing an easy inside basket.
Fowles is and always has been a powerful defensive player. For much of Game 3, she seemed disconnected from the proceedings.
That changed once the Sparks threatened in the fourth. Fowles scored nine of her 13 points from that point on, while belatedly asserting herself on defense. And for just long enough, she countered the offensive dominance of Los Angeles' Candace Parker to help the Lynx to a 91-80 victory at Target Center.
The last time the Lynx won a WNBA title, they traded for a post player who became integral to their success, as Janel McCarville became a deft passer out of the high post. Fowles is McCarville's opposite. She is a powerful low-post player and intimidating defender, at least when she's at her best.
Unlike McCarville, the offense will not run through her, and at times it might succeed in spite of her. But at her best she can give the Lynx superior rebounding and defensive play, and she was at her best in the fourth quarter.
"She's shown it at times for us," Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve said. "I think with Sylvia, you've got to remember, when she first got here, it was new. And now in the playoffs, it's new again. I think she wants to try to figure things out, wants to feel good, wants to help. I thought she, today...she got really determined, and made hustle plays."