When the call finally came, after seven months of waiting, Sylvia Fowles was so happy she could hardly function.
"I was a tad bit excited," Fowles admitted Tuesday at the Lynx's practice facility, still sporting the grin forward Maya Moore said the newcomer came to practice with.
Fowles had been waiting for word since January that she would be coming to Minnesota. Through ups and downs, she might have lost hope. But Sunday, after dormant negotiations revived, Fowles finally got the call. And she couldn't even bring herself to pack.
"It's like Christmas times three," she said.
Funny, her new teammates feel the same way. A whirlwind few days included getting the call late Sunday, finally packing and flying to Minnesota on Monday, arriving and spending a good five hours with her old college teammate Seimone Augustus and spending a mostly sleepless night before her first practice Tuesday.
After a three-way trade involving the Lynx, Chicago and Atlanta, the 29-year-old is where she wants to be.
"I wanted to be in a place that was already established," Fowles said.
The 6-6 center and three-time WNBA All-Star joins a Lynx team now clearly favored to vie for a third title in five years. And for Fowles, who spent her first seven seasons in Chicago, the change in culture was immediate. Fowles said Moore was on her right away, showing her everything she needed to do. Lynx Executive Vice President Roger Griffith said Augustus — still recovering from knee surgery — burned more calories of nervous energy on the sidelines wishing she could be on the court than the players practicing.