ATLANTA - It's 1 a.m. outside the visiting locker room in Philips Arena. Her teammates have boarded the bus. Lindsay Whalen lags behind, savoring the moment, sipping a beverage and teasing everyone who walks by, including security guards and her husband, Ben Greve, who is helping lug equipment.
"Ben, start carrying some bags, man," Whalen says. "Start earning your keep."
She's giddy and exhausted, and has passed on her customary three or four ice packs in favor of an icy drink. Circular bruises stand out on her arms, where she's taken elbows, but she is feeling no pain.
"I'll holla at ya later!" she says to a coach, giggling as she sings the words.
When Whalen helped the Gophers women's basketball team sell out Williams Arena, it was hard to imagine a greater career highlight for a girl from Hutchinson. Friday night in Atlanta, Whalen topped herself, winning a WNBA championship with the Lynx.
"Yeah ... yeah," she said, nodding as she thought about it. "This is definitely my career highlight. For five months, to be a part of the whole process and fight through the WNBA season and win it, yeah, this is the highlight."
It's not an easy choice for her. Besides becoming the most popular women's athlete in state history, she starred for the Connecticut Sun in the WNBA, still plays in Prague, and last summer played on the gold medal U.S. team at the FIBA world championships.
This season felt like a culmination for Whalen. In her second year with the Lynx, she earned MVP votes, made the All-WNBA first team and won a title. The Lynx won seven of their eight playoff games after building the best record in the league.