For six seasons, the Lynx promoted their one home game with Connecticut each year with ads featuring the same visiting player. The message was to come see the Sun's Lindsay Whalen.
Now No. 13 will play at Target Center all summer.
The Lynx, who always coveted the former Gophers star, announced a blockbuster trade Tuesday to obtain the veteran point guard and the No. 2 overall pick in the WNBA draft in April. In exchange, the Sun acquired second-year point guard Renee Montgomery and the No. 1 pick.
"[This has] always been in the back of my mind. Some day I would love to play professionally in Minnesota," Whalen said via a teleconference call from the Czech Republic, where she plays for USK Prague between WNBA seasons. "Obviously, just being from there and everything, I thought it would work out some day. I just wasn't sure when."
Whalen, whose family still lives in Hutchinson, has become one of the top WNBA point guards after an amazing college career at Minnesota. She was a three-time All-America pick and led the Gophers to their first Final Four as a senior in 2004.
The Sun took her with the fourth overall pick in the draft that year, then asked for a king's ransom when the Lynx inquired about trading for her.
Roger Griffith, the team's executive vice president, wouldn't pay the price at the time. Since then, the Lynx have missed the playoffs the past five seasons and announced attendance has stagnated at about 7,500 per game for four years in a row. The actual crowd count usually has been several thousand fewer than that.
But the dark cloud over this franchise might be drifting away. Everyone connected with the Lynx is predicting this team, with Whalen and four other All-Stars, should contend for the Western Conference and league titles -- lofty dreams for a team which has never won a playoff series in 11 years.