2010 WNBA Finals
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Dates | September 12 – 16 | |||||||||
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MVP | Lauren Jackson (Seattle) | |||||||||
Hall of Famers | Storm: Swin Cash (2022) Lauren Jackson (2021) | |||||||||
Eastern Finals | Atlanta defeated New York, 2–0 | |||||||||
Western Finals | Seattle defeated Phoenix, 2–0 | |||||||||
The 2010 WNBA Finals was the championship
The WNBA Finals were under a 2–2–1 rotation, with the Storm holding home-court advantage as they had a better regular season record (28–6) than the Dream (19–15). This was the 1st time the teams have met in the championship round. The Dream made their first ever appearance in the Finals while the Storm made their second appearance, after winning the 2004 championship series.
This was the second straight year in which neither team advancing to the Finals had been there the previous season. Seattle had not won a playoff series since their Finals victory in 2004, when they defeated the Connecticut Sun 2–1. Betty Lennox, who played with Atlanta after leaving the Storm (now with L.A.) was named series MVP in 2004. Only two players remain from the championship roster–all-stars Sue Bird and Lauren Jackson. To advance to the Finals, the Storm defeated Diana Taurasi and the defending champion Phoenix Mercury 2–0 in the Western Conference Finals.
This was the first WNBA Finals appearance for both head coaches. Each coach had been with their respective team since the 2008 season. Seattle's Brian Agler had been involved with the WNBA since 1999, when he was head coach of the Minnesota Lynx. Atlanta's Marynell Meadors was one of the league's original eight head coaches, leading the Charlotte Sting to a 15–13 record in their inaugural season. This was the first ever Finals series to feature the two most recent Coach of the Year award winners; Meadors won the award in 2009 and Agler won in 2010.
This series featured 9 international players (most notably Lauren Jackson) from 6 different backgrounds. Seattle's roster boasted five foreign-born players hailing from Australia, the Czech Republic and Russia. Atlanta had four, representing Belarus, Brazil and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. This was a WNBA record for the championship series; eight international players were featured in the 1998 Finals.
The series ended with the Storm beating the Dream in
Background
2010 WNBA Playoffs
Seattle Storm | Atlanta Dream | ||
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28–6 (.824) 1st West, 1st overall |
Regular season | 19–15 (.559) 4th East, 5th overall | |
Defeated the (4) Los Angeles Sparks, 2–0 | Conference Semifinals | Defeated the (1) Washington Mystics, 2–0 | |
Defeated the (2) Phoenix Mercury, 2–0 | Conference Finals | Defeated the (2) New York Liberty, 2–0 |
Regular season series
The Storm won the regular season series:
June 1, 2010
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Atlanta Dream 72, Seattle Storm 90 | ||
(6) | Pts: Jackson (32) Rebs: Jackson (10) |
Seattle, WA Attendance: 7,586 |
FSSO |
August 10, 2010
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Seattle Storm 80, Atlanta Dream 70 | ||
(8) | Pts: McCoughtry (16) Rebs: Lyttle (17) |
Atlanta, GA Attendance: 6,042 |
Atlanta Dream
The
Seattle Storm
The Seattle Storm finished the regular season as the Western Conference champion with a 28–6 record. As the No. 1 seed in the conference, the Storm eliminated the No. 4 seeded Los Angeles Sparks in two games in the first round; the Sparks had eliminated the Storm from the playoffs in three of the previous five seasons. In the Western Conference Finals against the Phoenix Mercury, the Storm won Game 1 but trailed by as many as 19 points in Game 2. They rallied back and Sue Bird made a 3-pointer with under three seconds left to win the series on Phoenix's home floor. This is the first time since their 2004 championship season in which the Storm were not eliminated in the first round of the playoffs.
Game summaries
All times listed below are Eastern Daylight Time.
Game 1
September 12
3:00pm |
Atlanta Dream 77, Seattle Storm 79 | ||
Scoring by quarter: 17–22, 22–17, 14–20, 24–20 | ||
(5) | Pts: Jackson (26) Rebs: Little (11) Asts: Bird (8) 3PFGs: Jackson (4–8) | |
Seattle leads the series 1–0 |
Seattle, WA Attendance: 15,084 Referees: #8 Daryl Humphrey #9 Denise Brooks #39 Michael Price |
Sue Bird made a tiebreaking jumper from the foul line with 2.6 seconds left and the Storm beat the Dream 79–77. Angel McCoughtry had a last-second try for the Dream, but her long 3-pointer from the left side did not connect.
League MVP Lauren Jackson had 26 points and eight rebounds for Seattle. Bird finished with 14 points and Camille Little had 18 points and 11 rebounds.
McCoughtry and
Jackson made a 3-pointer late in the third quarter to give Seattle the lead for good at 52–49 and the Storm led by six going into the fourth quarter.
Atlanta trailed by nine in the fourth before rallying, tying it at 77 on Castro Marques' old-fashioned three-point play with a minute left.
Each team had to deal with foul trouble for one of its star players. Seattle forward
Game 2
September 14
9:00pm |
Atlanta Dream 84, Seattle Storm 87 | ||
Scoring by quarter: 21–19, 26–30, 18–20, 19–18 | ||
Castro Marques (10–20) |
Pts: Jackson (26) Rebs: Little (9) Asts: Bird (5) Stls: Wright (5) | |
Seattle leads the series 2–0 |
Seattle, WA Attendance: 13,898 Referees: #55 Eric Brewton #13 Cameron Inouye #17 Scott Twardoski |
League MVP Lauren Jackson scored 26 points, Swin Cash added 19 and the Seattle Storm moved one step closer to the title with an 87–84 win over the Atlanta Dream in Game 2 of the finals.
Seattle improved to 21–0 at home this season and is hoping it won't need another game at
McCoughtry was off in Game 2, making just seven of 23 shots on her way to 21 points. She tried to salvage the shaky performance, scoring five quick points in the final 30 seconds to help Atlanta close to 87–84.
Cash missed two free throws with 2.2 seconds left but Atlanta could not get off a potential tying shot.
"I just missed some shots. You're going to have bad days," McCoughtry said. "I had good looks. Usually I knock them down. I just didn't knock them down today. I just gotta stay more focused."
Game 3
September 16
8:00pm |
Seattle Storm 87, Atlanta Dream 84 | ||
Scoring by quarter: 28–24, 15–20 , 24–16, 20–24 | ||
(3–5) | Pts: (13–23) | |
Seattle wins the series 3–0 |
Atlanta, GA Attendance: 10,522 Referees: #4 Sue Blauch #38 Lamont Simpson #18 Kurt Walker |
After losing in the first round of the playoffs five straight years following their first title, Sue Bird, Lauren Jackson and the Seattle Storm are champions again.
"I guess now I can be honest," Bird said. "Losing in the first round has been terrible. It's something I took personally and something a lot of us took personally. I judge myself by winning, so to not win in five years really, really hurt."
The Storm made up for the long gap between titles by dominating the 2010 season. Seattle was 28-6 during the regular season - tying the league record for wins - before sweeping each of its three postseason series.
Bird and Jackson are the only players remaining from the Storm's 2004 title team.
"I think the roads have been completely different," said Jackson of the two championships. "After the last six years, it definitely has taken a long time to get here."
Jackson, who had 26 points in each of the Storm's first two wins in the series, had 15 points and nine rebounds and was selected
Swin Cash scored 18 points to lead a balanced offense as Seattle overcame 35 points by Atlanta's Angel McCoughtry.
The Dream star, who set a WNBA playoff record with 42 points in the Eastern Conference finals clinching win over the New York Liberty, tried to rally Atlanta with nine points in the final 2:30. But McCoughtry and Coco Miller missed 3-pointers in the final 6 seconds, setting off a celebration by Seattle's players.
The Dream rallied in the final minute after trailing 82–70.
McCoughtry's three-point play with 46 seconds remaining cut Seattle's lead to 85–80. Seattle's Tanisha Wright missed two free throws and McCoughtry was fouled by Cash while missing a 3. McCoughtry made two of three free throws to cut the lead to three points with 31 seconds remaining.
Bird dribbled away the shot clock before missing a shot to set up a basket by Atlanta's
"I think we have grown up quite a bit this season," said Atlanta coach Marynell Meadors. "Maybe another minute on the clock might have made a difference in the outcome of this game and the same thing with the two games in Seattle."
Awards
- 2010 WNBA Champions: Seattle Storm
- Finals MVP: Lauren Jackson (Seattle)
Rosters
2010 Seattle Storm Finals roster | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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2010 Atlanta Dream Finals roster | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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