Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Feat to repeat: Lynx set sights on back-to-back titles

- By Dave Campbell

MINNEAPOLI­S » Believe it or not, there is still another feat left for the Minnesota Lynx to accomplish once the season begins next weekend.

With four of the last seven WNBA championsh­ips, the Lynx are well-establishe­d as one of the league’s few true dynasties. Their starting five has combined for 25 appearance­s in the AllStar game, a total limited by the event’s absence during Olympic years. They’ve got gold medals and individual awards galore.

The Lynx, though, can become the only WNBA franchise with five titles if they’re able to repeat in 2018. Being sized for rings in back-to-back seasons, well, there’s another box left unchecked. They’ve only won championsh­ips in odd-numbered years, as if that were an actual knock against them.

“It’s one of the motivating factors in the offseason as you’re getting ready,” point guard Lindsay Whalen said, “but when the team is in here we’re not really talking about it every day. I think we feel so solid in what we’ve done — of course we want to win and we want to repeat — that it’s not something we’re stressed on. That would be amazing and, really, like icing on the cake.”

Five-time All-WNBA forward Maya Moore, who turns 29 next month, is still the baby of the bunch. Whalen and power forward Rebekkah Brunson are 36, meaning they’ve each won three titles in their 30s. Shooting guard Seimone Augustus, who’s 34, and center Sylvia Fowles, who’s 32, have won two championsh­ips since turning 30.

So much for supposedly being passed their prime. These Lynx have become a bit like the middle school whiz kid with straight As who finishes the science test early and starts asking for extra credit assignment­s. They’re the only franchise in the league’s 21 years with six appearance­s in the finals. The now-defunct Houston Comets are the only other team that won four titles, all coming in the WNBA’s first four seasons. The Los Angeles Sparks are the last team to repeat, in 2001 and 2002.

No wonder Minnesota is such a popular place to be.

The Lynx signed defensive stalwart Tanisha Wright out of semi-retirement, traded for three-time All-Star point guard Danielle Robinson and added six-year veteran Lynetta Kizer for depth in the post in an offseason overhaul of the bench. Fowles pushed for a trade to Minnesota in 2015, setting the table for the third of these four titles under head coach Cheryl Reeve, who was given the dual role of general manager over the winter.

“The players want to come play with these players, because these are some of the most humble superstars our league has ever seen,” Reeve said, before adding a quip about the team’s sparkling practice facility shared with the NBA’s Timberwolv­es: “What a beautiful retirement home we have here. You have your chef in the back. You’ve got your cold tubs. You’ve got all this amazing stuff. I hope we can continue our trend of sending veterans out winners.”

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