INDIANAPOLIS - Wait until next season.
Coach Cheryl Reeve essentially said as much Sunday after underdog Indiana defeated the Lynx 87-78 to dethrone them as WNBA champions.
"Now that something was taken away from us and we're no longer defending champs," Reeve said, "it'll be nice to kind of start fresh and see if we can't keep this thing going."
The Lynx have had back-to-back 27-7 regular seasons -- one victory shy of the league single-season record. Last year they followed up with a dominant 7-1 run in the playoffs.
This year they struggled in the first two rounds, beating Seattle by one point in clinching Game 3 and Los Angeles by one in Game 2 of a sweep. Indiana stunned the Lynx by winning the first game of the finals at Target Center, where the Lynx were 20-1, and the Fever closed the series with two victories in Indiana.
The analysis of what went wrong for the Lynx -- and what needs to be addressed in the offseason -- began soon after the final horn.
"I've got a starting five that obviously we did a lot of great things with," Reeve said. "Every year you have changes, but there's no question that you've got Lindsay [Whalen], Seimone [Augustus] and Maya [Moore] and Rebekkah Brunson, who's in her prime. For me, everything is around them. That's how we go."
Or not.