Perhaps frustrated by back-to-back losses to the Sun in Connecticut but clearly outraged by a perceived bias when it comes to foul calls, Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve and her players struck a unified pose after Thursday's 82-71 loss in Uncasville.
One by one they opened with a statement crediting the Sun for its strong play, particularly by DeWanna Bonner, who made 10 of 17 shots and scored a season-high 31 points.
After that? All they wanted to talk about was the 25-10 discrepancy in free throws, a margin that was 41-17 in the Sun's two victories over Minnesota this week, wins that pushed Connecticut (17-6) into a first-place tie with Las Vegas atop the WNBA standings.
For example: "I'll start by commending Connecticut for the great team that they are, and DeWanna Bonner's great game,'' Reeve said. "She was hard to play against, she made some tough shots. That being said, it's absolutely unacceptable that our team can only shoot 10 free throws after shooting just seven the other night. Twenty-five to 10. …. There was a massive discrepancy from a personal foul standpoint (24 called on the Lynx vs. 18 on the Sun). That's unacceptable. That's not fair to this team. It's not fair to the players in this locker room.''
Asked about the Connecticut defense, Reeve said: "Twenty-five free throws for the Connecticut Sun and 10 free throws for the Minnesota Lynx.''
Asked about a difficult two games for Napheesa Collier, who made a combined 7 of 22 shots and totaled four rebounds, Reeve said: "Twenty-five free throws for the Connecticut Sun and 10 free throws for the Minnesota Lynx."
You get the idea.
The Lynx never led, trailing by 14 heading into the fourth quarter. Minnesota pulled within 74-69 with 1:39 left on Bridget Carleton's three-pointer. But the Lynx (13-8) were outscored 8-2 over the final 99 seconds, with six of those eight Sun points coming from the free-throw line.