By the time it was over, the Lynx had rocked Target Center and the Atlanta Dream had, rather meekly, been rolled. The Lynx and their 13,804 fans were celebrating and Dream star Angel McCoughtry might have been the most frustrated person in downtown Minneapolis.
Seems just like old times, doesn't it?
With a take-no-prisoners defense and a relentless offense, the Lynx began their quest for a second WNBA title in three years Sunday with an 84-59 dismantling of Atlanta in the first game of the best-of-five series, a rematch of a Lynx sweep of the Dream in the title series two years ago.
It was a first punch, both literally and figuratively, a physical statement of purpose that came within four points of matching the biggest win in WNBA Finals history. Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve called it just a step in the right direction. Atlanta coach Fred Williams said his team had been a step slow all night.
Maya Moore hit 10 of 16 shots on the way to a game-high 23 points. Seimone Augustus scored 19 and Monica Wright came off the Lynx bench and stuffed the stat sheet like a calzone. She scored a career playoff-best 20 points, had five rebounds, three assists, three steals and she took two charges.
"My teammates have all the confidence in the world in me," Wright said, "and it was just falling tonight."
Wright, Moore and Augustus combined to outscore the Dream by three points.
"Minnesota came out and threw a good punch," Williams said. "And a lot of players on our end hit the floor pretty hard and felt the pain."