A recent Lynx practice ended with an extended, intense scrimmage. Starters vs. reserves. It was fast, loud, competitive. And a little surprising too, with the reserves winning rather easily.
So what happened?
"Monica Wright happened," center Janel McCarville said afterward. "I mean, she was unstoppable, coast to coast. I don't think anybody can keep her in front of them. She kind of picked us apart today."
Think of the veteran-laden Lynx. Three Olympians in Lindsay Whalen, Seimone Augustus and Maya Moore. McCarville, the newcomer. Rebekkah Brunson, powerful in the post.
But talk to the coaches and you get the idea that, in many ways, Wright could be one of the most important players on the team this season. The reasons? In no particular order: Her speed, which she has learned to harness; her strength, which sets her apart, and her versatility, which you will see a lot this season.
Candice Wiggins was traded away during the offseason, part of a three-team deal that brought McCarville here. That plus the team's decision not to re-sign Erin Thorn has opened the door for big minutes for Wright, who will start the season as coach Cheryl Reeve's main guard off the bench, both at point and off-guard. Wright also will play small forward at times when Reeve uses a smaller lineup with Moore at power forward.
That means Wright should see a big jump in minutes and opportunities over last season, when she averaged 8.6 points in 19-plus minutes per game.
"Every year I come in with the intent to make the team better, in any role coach wants me to fill," Wright said.