Baltimore Sun

Delle Donne injures knee in setback

Mystics lose star, chance to take control of series

- By Paul Newberry

ATLANTA — Alex Bentley came off the bench to score 21 points and the Atlanta Dream evened their WNBA semifinal playoff series against Washington with a 78-75 victory Tuesday night, but the game was marred in the closing minutes when Mystics star Elena Delle Donne went downwith what looked to be a serious knee injury.

Delle Donne had another huge game with 27 points, 14 rebounds, six assists, two blocks and a steal, giving the Mystics a chance to take control of the best-of-five series with a second straight road win.

Then, with just over 3 minutes remaining and Washington clinging to a 70-68 lead, Delle Donnestumb­led onadrive to the basket and collapsed to the court, clutching her left knee.

The entire Mystics team raced to her side at the opposite end of the court, some turning away in dismay when they saw Delle Donne writing on the court in pain.

The injury may deprive the series of two of its biggest stars. The Dream already was missing its longtime leader, Angel McCoughtry, who went down late in the season with a knee injury and cheered on her teammates from the bench.

After Delle Donne’s injury, Washington struggled to create offensive chances down the stretch. A traveling call gave the ball to Atlanta, which went ahead for good, 76-74, on Elizabeth Williams layup off an inbounds pass. Ariel Atkins missed a 3-pointer, Washington turned it over again and Kristi Toliver’s long 3 at buzzer bounced off the rim, allowing the Dream to hold on.

The teams head to Washington for Game 3 on Friday night. Mystics guard Kristi Toliver (Maryland) tries to get past the defense of Atlanta guard Tiffany Hayes in Game 2 of a WNBA semifinal Tuesday night. Toliver had 16 points.

Bentley provided a spark off the bench, especially after Brittney Sykes went to the bench with four fouls early in the third quarter and the Mystics took a 10-point lead, the biggest for either team. Bentley hit 8 of 14 shots, oneofthemo­naflailing­drive that really got the Dream fired up.

The Mystics trailed almost the entire opening half, finally claiming their first lead on Delle Donne’s pull-up jumper with 2:54 left in the second quarter. Washington wentto the break with a 36-34 lead. Tiffany Hayes scored 17 points for the Dream, while Williams and Jessica Breland added10 points apiece. Toliver finished with 16 points but went only 1 of 5 from 3-point range. The Mystics finished 6 of 20 beyond the arc. The Dream turned it over16 times. Make room in the trophy case: Atlanta’s Nicki Collen picked up another coach of the year award.

The WNBA recognized Collen as its top coach for 2018, adding to the honor she picked up last week from The Associated Press after leading the Dream to a franchise-record 23 wins during the regular season.

Collen wasn’t the only member of Atlanta’s leadership team to be honored Tuesday. First-year general manager Chris Sienko was selected as the WNBA’s executive of the year.

Collen is the second Dream coach to receive the league’s coach of the year award. Marynell Meadorscla­imedthehon­orin2009. Draft lottery: The Las Vegas Aces will pick first in the WNBA draft for a third straight year.

Las Vegas won the draft lottery Tuesday night after barely missing the playoffs this past season.

The Aces had the second-best chance (27.6 percent) to secure the top choice after finishing with the second-worst combined record the past two seasons. They drafted Kelsey Plum in 2016 when the franchise was still in San Antonio and took A’ja Wilson with the No. 1 pick this past season.

The New York Liberty will draft second after moving upfromthe fourth spot. Indiana, which had a 44 percent chance to get the top pick, will go third and Chicago will pick fourth. Dallas will pick fifth and Minnesota sixth. The Lynx will be followed by Los Angeles, Phoenix, Connecticu­t, Washington, Atlanta and Seattle.

While there may not be a marquee player in this season’s draft like Wilson, there are alot of talented seniors led by centers Kalani Brown of Baylor and Teaira McCowan of Mississipp­i State.

 ?? JOHN AMIS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ??
JOHN AMIS/ASSOCIATED PRESS

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