LOS ANGELES – The question seemed to catch Maya Moore by surprise, causing her to pause a moment to think it over. In a news conference after the Lynx's 85-79 victory over Los Angeles, a reporter asked Moore to name something that rattled her.
That marked the first time Sunday that the Lynx forward did not offer a swift and decisive response. Her numbers quantified her impact on Game 4 of the WNBA Finals: 31 points, nine rebounds, five assists, three steals, two blocked shots. But the real measure of her magnificence was less about the raw statistics than her ability to answer every Sparks surge, in a victory that pushed the series to a deciding Game 5 at Target Center.
Despite the weight and intensity of Game 4, Moore didn't appear to be rattled at all. Afterward, when she was asked what it took to shake her, the best she could come up with was the occasional hard collision on a screen. Even with the WNBA championship on the line, she doesn't expect anything different in Thursday's Game 5.
"That's the name of the game," Moore said. "You have to be able to just mentally lock in and let things go. The strength of our team is something I try to lead: Next play, next play, don't get rattled.
"At the end of the day, I just want to leave it all out on the floor. No regrets. That's probably when I feel the worst, if I feel like there was something left that I didn't give, or something we didn't quite do that we know we can do."
The Lynx did most everything to the best of their ability in Game 4. Lindsay Whalen, who had been held in check for two games, got back to driving the lane and finished with 13 points. Seimone Augustus hit some timely shots and dispensed five assists. Sylvia Fowles got 13 rebounds — leading the Lynx to a 41-25 advantage on the boards — and Rebekkah Brunson scored four critical points in the final two minutes, including two free throws with 12.5 seconds left after she stole the ball and drew a foul.
Moore, though, stole the show. Her back-to-back buckets started a 9-0 run in the second quarter that gave the Lynx a 31-24 lead; from that point, they never trailed again. Her seven rebounds in the first half helped fuel her team's transition game.
When Brunson got into early foul trouble, Moore picked up the slack on defense by guarding Sparks star Candace Parker, blocking two of her shots and helping limit her to 4-of-14 shooting.