At first, Lindsay Whalen said all the right things. Early in the Lynx's game Saturday at San Antonio, with the Stars exploding to an 18-point lead out of the gate, Whalen told her team to focus. She stressed that it was a long game, told the players to not stop playing.
When that didn't work, Whalen took over.
There are a lot of positives to come out of the Lynx victory, which clinched the Western Conference semifinals and put the Lynx in the conference finals for the fourth straight season. There was Seimone Augustus' 21 points, a near triple-double by Maya Moore.
And it set up perhaps the most anticipated matchup of the season. Phoenix's victory at Los Angeles on Sunday put the Mercury and the Lynx in the conference finals, which will start Friday in Phoenix. "It's a challenge we feel ready for," Reeve said.
But back to Whalen, who put her play where her mouth was.
"We weren't waking up," Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve said. So Whalen started driving to the basket, scoring, getting fouled. Whalen scored 31 points, the best playoff total of her career, 27 in the final three quarters. Ultimately, the rest of the team caught that fever.
"It was, 'Come on, follow me,' " Reeve said. "She was a train coming down the track. She asserted her will, and we needed it. If you could have been around her during the course of that game … the words she spoke, the way she spoke 'em, her actions. It was one of the best performances I've ever been around."
That's saying something. Reeve, in her fifth year as Lynx coach, has been in the league 14 years, been with 11 teams that made the playoffs, seven that reached the finals and four that won it all.