Los Angeles Times

Aces, Storm faves to meet in Finals

Las Vegas made a late run to the No. 1 seed, joins Seattle as teams to beat in playoffs.

- By Thuc Nhi Nguyen Nguyen reported from Los Angeles.

When Bill Laimbeer arrived in Bradenton, Fla., for the WNBA’s quarantine­d season in July, the Las Vegas Aces’ head coach had a clear idea which team he thought would rise to the top of the league. It wasn’t his.

Two months later, with the No. 1 seed in the WNBA playoffs, Laimbeer needed a moment to collect his thoughts.

“Who would’ve thunk it?” Laimbeer told reporters on a videoconfe­rence call after the Aces (18-4) clinched the top seed Sunday with a win over the championsh­ip-favorite Seattle Storm.

The Aces’ unexpected rise to the top of the standings is the latest twist in the WNBA’s unique season, which continues Tuesday with the first round of the playoffs. The team rode star forward A’ja Wilson and the most prolific bench in league history to a season sweep of the Storm and three wins in four days to close the regular season. All this after losing starters Liz Cambage and Kelsey Plum before the season began.

“Where we started the year, a lot of uncertaint­y, a lot of new faces and to have this kind of success to date, we’ll take it,” said Laimbeer, who lost Plum to an Achilles injury and Cambage to a medical exemption related to COVID-19. “But we realize that we’ve won nothing. There’s still a long way to go.”

With a two-round bye in hand, the Aces and No. 2 seed Storm (18-4) have one week to rest before the semifinal series begin Sunday. Six other teams start action this week.

The favorites

The Aces thwarted the Storm’s charge for the top seed, but the teams seem destined to meet again in the Finals. After the 22-game regular season, the top two finished three games ahead of the third-seeded Sparks.

The Storm, who played Sunday without Breanna Stewart (ankle) and Sue Bird (knee), lead the league in both offensive and defensive rating.

After losing Cambage and Plum, the Aces persevered with Wilson, freeagent acquisitio­n Angel McCoughtry and their explosive bench, which averaged 35 points per game for the season, breaking the record of 33.9 set by Minnesota in 2008.

The field

The Sparks faded at the finish with two straight losses. After celebratin­g its bench early this year, the team’s depth was tested with injuries to guards Sydney Wiese (ankle) and Tierra Ruffin-Pratt (shoulder). They could return in time for the Sparks’ single-eliminatio­n second-round game Thursday.

With teams getting reseeded after each round, the Sparks (15-7) face the lowest remaining seed after firstround games featuring the No. 5 Phoenix Mercury vs. the No. 8 Washington Mystics, and the No. 6 Chicago Sky vs. the No. 7 Connecticu­t Sun. The remaining first-round survivor faces No. 4 seed Minnesota. The Lynx (14-8) are expected to have forward Sylvia Fowles, the league’s all-time leading rebounder, back from a calf injury that limited her to seven games.

The featured names

Wilson and Stewart lead the MVP conversati­on with their teams at the top of the league. Stewart, the 2018 MVP who led the Storm to the title, averaged 19.7 points, 8.3 rebounds and 3.6 assists this season but missed the last two games because of injury.

Wilson averaged 20.5 points per game in the regular season, which ranked second in the WNBA, with a league-leading 2.0 blocks per game and 8.5 rebounds per game.

Four years after winning her first WNBA championsh­ip, Sparks forward Candace Parker is a defensive player-of-the-year contender as she leads the league with 9.7 rebounds per game.

Despite three weeks without Brittney Griner, who left the bubble for personal reasons in August, the Mercury (13-9) advanced to the playoffs on the back of Diana Taurasi, who averaged 21.1 points per game over the last nine games, which included seven Phoenix wins.

For the third straight year, point guard Courtney Vandersloo­t broke her own record for assists per game in a season, averaging 9.95 this year for the Sky (12-10).

 ?? Ethan Miller Getty Images ?? LAS VEGAS coach Bill Laimbeer, high-fiving A’ja Wilson, has his Aces in position to make a deep run in the WNBA playoffs coming in as the No. 1 seed.
Ethan Miller Getty Images LAS VEGAS coach Bill Laimbeer, high-fiving A’ja Wilson, has his Aces in position to make a deep run in the WNBA playoffs coming in as the No. 1 seed.

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