Baltimore Sun Sunday

Storm get jump with unselfish play

Seattle’s dominant effort leaves Mystics scrambling after Game 1 setback

- By Tim Booth

SEATTLE — Jewell Loyd was unselfish in the deciding game of the WNBA semifinals, giving up her spot on the floor and choosing not to mess with what was going right for the Seattle Storm at the time.

Her decision appeared to be rewarded in Game 1 of the Finals.

“It’s amazing how many times when you’re thinking right like she (is), and you’re unselfish like she was in Game 5, how you are rewarded the next time,” Seattle coach Dan Hughes said.

Loyd made 9 of 12 shots and scored 23 points, league MVP Breanna Stewart added 20 points, and the Storm opened the Finals with an 89-76 victory over the Washington Mystics on Friday night.

The first WNBA Finals game in Seattle in eight years was a dominant performanc­e by the home team, led by the guard who watched most of the fourth quarter of Seattle’s Game 5 win over Phoenix in the semifinals. Loyd made the suggestion to Hughes not to change Seattle’s lineup during that fourth quarter against Phoenix which meant she stayed on the bench.

And instead of sulking about her struggles for most of the semifinal series, Loyd became the leader of an efficient offensive performanc­e from the top team in the league during the regular season.

“It helps when you’re playing with people who are unselfish and set you up and keep giving you the ball. That’s what makes this team special. Everyone is willing to make that extra pass regardless if you miss 100 shots and make the next 70, this team is going to give you the ball.”

“We were a step behind — they looked quicker than us,” Washington coach Mike Thibault said. “They made us pay for every defensive mistake for a stretch, and we made enough of them to help them.”

Washington’s first Finals game in franchise history was mostly forgettabl­e. Elena Delle Donne and Kristi Toliver both struggled shooting. Ariel Atkins led the Mystics with 23 points, but no other Washington player scored more than Natasha Cloud’s 11 points.

Still dealing with a bone bruise in her left knee that forced her to miss one game of the semifinals, Delle Donne was 4 of 11, finishing with 10 points and didn’t play the fourth quarter. Toliver scored just five points on 2 of 11 shooting, continuing to be either really hot or very cold with her shot in the postseason.

“I think our whole offense was a little bit stagnant. Instead of getting the ball and moving it side to side, we were hanging onto it on one side and staring at each other,” Delle Donne said. “We need to move a little bit more and make them chase it around like they were doing to us. As a whole, we were way too stagnant.”

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