After she was named the WNBA's Rookie of the Year and the Lynx won the league title last year, Maya Moore went to Spain. Not for a vacation -- for more basketball.
Ros Casares, based in Valencia, went 48-2, winning the Spanish league and EuroLeague titles. Moore played in 28 of those games starting in January, only one a loss.
So Moore's basketball résumé, a month shy of her 23rd birthday, reads like this: three high school state titles in Georgia, two NCAA titles at the University of Connecticut, one World Championships title, one WNBA title, two overseas titles with a chance at two more championships this year.
Moore, a 6-foot forward, is one of three Lynx on the U.S. team playing in the London Summer Olympics. And the Lynx, of course, could become the first WNBA team to win back-to-back titles since the Los Angeles Sparks in 2001 and '02.
"It could be luck," said Lynx assistant coach Shelley Patterson, asked about the success of Moore's teams. "She could be our lucky charm. If it happens with the Olympics and it happens again this year with us, I am going to have to rub her shoulder and go play the lottery."
Moore would laugh at that remark. She has an appealing sense of humor and a mature perspective on life.
"I try to do a good job of focusing my attention on the important things, not listening to a lot of hype," Moore said. "I always try to represent [myself] well as a person who has been blessed with a lot of gifts and a lot of opportunities."
As soon as Moore arrived in training camp a year ago, practices became more intense.