THE PRESIDENT: Hello, everybody. (Applause.) Please, have a seat. Welcome to the White House. And give it up for our special guests, the 2013 WNBA Champions, "Los Lynx" -– the Minnesota Lynx. (Applause.) We happen also to have some fierce Lynx fans, including Congressman Tim Walz, who is here, and I understand that Mayor Chris Coleman just arrived. So give them both a big round of applause. Chris is around here somewhere -- there he is back there. Stand up, Chris, so everybody can see you. Take credit. (Applause.)
Now, in 2012, when the Lynx came here after their first title, I said I had a feeling I might see them again before I left office. (Laughter.) I just want to mention that I was right. And so you can fact-check that, PolitiFact. I got that one right. (Laughter.)
One of your assistant coaches, Shelley Patterson, put it pretty simply: "Winning is what we like to do." And it shows. Over the last three years, Coach Cheryl Reeve has led the Lynx to the WNBA's best record, winning more than three-quarters of your games, making it -- three straight championship series. That's pretty good. Last year, Seimone Augustus issued one of the strangest apologies in sports -- I've never heard this before -- she said, "I'm sorry if we make it look too easy." (Laughter.) That's a good problem to have.
But you began last season with something to prove. In 2012, a tough loss to the Indiana Fever in the Finals kept you from a second straight championship. So in 2013, you set out for a little redemption, and, to put it mildly, you succeeded.
You did not only go 26-8 in the regular season, but you also swept the playoffs -- a perfect 7-0. You won it with all-star talent, from Seimone to Rebekkah Brunson, hometown hero Lindsay Whalen. You did it with fellow all-star and Finals MVP Maya Moore, who has now been here so many times I've lost track. (Laughter.) I mean, basically there's like a Maya Moore wing in the White House. (Laughter.) And when she comes, we kind of -- we've got all her stuff here; she's got a toothbrush. (Laughter.)
And you did it with all-star teamwork. On the road, in the clinching game of the Finals, all five starters scored in double digits. Last season, Lindsay set a new franchise record for assists after just 88 games, a mark that took 205 games to set in the first place. Just gives you a sense of how good she is. Lindsay can play.
But bringing home titles isn't the only thing that's earned "Los Lynx" fans throughout Minnesota. These young women are outstanding members of the community. They make time to help local students with their reading. I hear they clean up pretty well for their annual "Catwalk for a Cure" fashion show – (laughter) -- that raises money for breast cancer research, so I'm going to have to look that up.
I also want to thank this team, as I always tell them, for being great examples for my daughters and for girls across the country. We know that when young women are involved in sports, they do better across the board. They do better across the board. (Applause.) And when the WNBA first said "we got next," some folks didn't think a professional basketball league could make it -- that was 18 seasons ago. And so we're excited to see not only where the Lynx are going to go in the future, but every WNBA team for years to come. And one of the things I'd like to see is a Chicago Sky title -- it's been a while. (Laughter.) A really, really -- a long while. But it might happen in the future.