The Arizona Republic

Taurasi scores 30; Mercury face rival Minnesota in semis

- DOUG FEINBERG

NEW YORK - Diana Taurasi tends to play her best when the most is on the line.

The star guard scored 30 points and Brittney Griner added 22 points, 10 rebounds and four blocks to help the eighth-seeded Phoenix Mercury beat the No. 3 New York Liberty 101-94 on Saturday. Taurasi is 13-3 in WNBA eliminatio­n games in her storied career, including a 6-0 mark on the road.

“I’m not afraid of it. It’s a challenge. It’s fun,” she said. “When you go on the road, especially here at the Garden. These fans are so thirsty they want a championsh­ip so bad. We came in the underdog. Today was a whole lot of fun.”

The Mercury will head to Minnesota for the semifinals, which is a fivegame series as opposed to the single eliminatio­n games that Phoenix won in the opening two rounds of the postseason.

“It’s going to be hard. They are the best in the league right now,” Taurasi said. “They are the defending champs. We know what they do. They know what we do. It’s going to be a battle of wills more than anything. Right now we’re finding our groove. Finding who we are.”

With Phoenix clinging to a two-point lead early in the fourth quarter, Taurasi scored five straight points in a 10-2 run that gave them an 84-76 advantage. New York refused to quit, hitting back-to-back 3s to get within 84-82. But that’s as close as the Liberty could get as they came up empty on the next few possession­s. New York trailed 90-86 with 1:29 left before Taurasi hit a 3pointer from the wing, pumping her fists at midcourt after it swished through the net that virtually sealed the victory.

Phoenix was in control in the first half as the Mercury led by 15 points in the second quarter thanks to the play of Penny Taylor, who finished with 20 points. Trailing 52-41 at the break, the Liberty opened the second half on a 13-2 run capped by Tina Charles’ 3-pointer to tie it at 54. They trailed 68-67 after three quarters and the game was tied at 74 after Epiphanny Prince’s 3pointer with 7:23 left in the final period.

The loss marked the end of 15-year WNBA veteran Swin Cash’s career.

“It’s tough to completely reflect right now, but I’m really proud of this team,” Cash said. “Took some bumps along the way, injuries. We set a really solid foundation on how hard you have to work and what it takes to get to that next level.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States