Las Vegas Review-Journal

Aces getting points aplenty

Early concerns about offense no longer valid

- By Jason Orts Las Vegas Review-journal

Aces coach Bill Laimbeer wasn’t in the best of moods a few days before his team opened the WNBA season.

He had just watched the

Aces score six points in the first quarter of a scrimmage and was wondering where points were going to come from, especially if forward A’ja Wilson’s ankle injury lingered into the regular season.

But after two games, Wilson has excelled and the Aces’ offense has fallen into place.

“The chemistry has been better than I thought,” Laimbeer said Thursday. “It’s a good thing for the coaches right now because they (players) are working together. They all like each other. They all understand each other. They’re starting to trust each other, which is great because they’ve only been together for a short time.”

Take away the final five minutes in the opener against Chicago, when they missed their last 11 shots in an 88-86 loss, and

the Aces have looked like they’ve played together for years.

Wilson is averaging 21.5 points and 11 rebounds on 51.6 percent shooting. Newcomer Angel McCoughtry scored 25 in her Aces debut and added 12 points in 15 minutes in the 100-70 win over Atlanta on Wednesday, when five players scored in double figures.

The Aces went 6-for-9 from 3-point range against the Dream, with Dearica Hamby, who scored 20 points against Atlanta and is averaging 17, and Kayla Mcbride hitting two apiece.

“The Chicago game taught us a lot,” Mccoughtry said. “We played so well, but we didn’t win because we didn’t hit any 3s and they hit (nine) and they win. You’ve got to hit at least one or two per game, and I don’t think that’s hard to do.”

The 3-point shot never will be an emphasis, not with Wilson and Mccoughtry relentless­ly attacking the basket, Hamby scoring on hustle plays and others such as Danielle Robinson and Jackie Young creating transition opportunit­ies.

Robinson is part of what Laimbeer calls his energy team alongside Hamby, last year’s Sixth Woman of the Year, and Young.

Laimbeer has been able to bring that kind of firepower off the bench because he chooses to start point guard Lindsay Allen.

Allen has responded with seven assists against Chicago and found her shot for 11 points against Atlanta.

“I’ve always known Lindsay could lead a team,” Laimbeer said. “She’s a very smart basketball player, but they didn’t have to guard her. Now, they have to guard her.”

Contact Jason Orts at jorts@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-3872936. Follow @Sportswith­orts on Twitter.

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