Even on a night when Jewell Loyd didn’t score 30 points, she still had a hand in that many.
Loyd tallied 26 of her own, had three assists that led to six more, and the Seattle Storm blew things open during the third quarter, rolling to a 95-71 victory against the Dallas Wings on Monday night.
That gave the Storm (13-6) a sweep of the two-game set in Climate Pledge Arena.
Nneka Ogwumike added 14 points and Ezi Magbegor had 12 for Seattle which won its fourth straight – all of them on the front end of their WNBA-record nine-game homestand. Altogether, the Storm’s home win streak now has reached eight. Their only loss in Seattle was the season-opener to Minnesota on May 14.
Loyd was coming off back-to-back 30-point performances: 34 in an 89-77 victory against Indiana last Thursday and 30 in the first game against Dallas last Saturday, a 97-76 Seattle victory.
On Monday, she was at 26 when she subbed out with 1:47 left in the third quarter and the Storm were ahead by 26 points at 72-46. Loyd, who logged all of her points plus three rebounds, three assists and three steals in just 25 minutes, 24 seconds of action, never took her sweats off the rest of the night. Loyd hit 8 of 14 (3 of 6 from 3-point range) and now has 90 points on 24-of-43 shooting (55.8 percent) in the last three games.
“We talk about how well we’re playing on the defensive end. When we can consistently be efficient in our offensive attack, she’s leading the way, with her aggressive level, and her hitting shots,” head coach Noelle Quinn said. “And her playmaking the last two games as well, has been amazing, in my opinion. … I think she’s in a great pocket right now, playing confidently, playing freely, and hopefully, she can get some more 30-point games.”
Seattle used a 6-0 scoring run at the outset of the second quarter to go ahead for good at 25-20 after being down 20-19 at the end of the first. It grew all the way to 10 on multiple occasions before halftime, the last time at 43-33. The Wings (4-15), who have dropped 13 of their last 14, got it all the way down to six at 43-37 before a pair of free throws by Ogwumike just before the buzzer made it 45-37 at the break.
The margin never got any closer. Up 48-39 early in the third, Seattle put 12 straight points on the board, beginning with an unusual four-point play. Magbegor, on her way to the hoop for a lay-in, was fouled hard by Dallas’ Teaira McCowan. The officials reviewed it and upgraded the call to a Flagrant 1. Magbegor hit both free throws.
Loyd then took over with 10 points in a row. With the Storm retaining possession after the flagrant, she nailed a 17-footer from the right of the lane for 52-39. Then it was a 3-pointer, a steal and coast-to-coast lay-in, and finally another 3-pointer, making it 60-39.
All of that factored into Seattle outscoring the Wings during that period, 34-13.
“The message was, whose adjustments were going to be greater,” Quinn said of her halftime advice. “The third quarter of the previous game, we put our foot on the gas. That was a testament to know that Dallas was going to be more aggressive to start the game. But we just stayed sharp, locked in, focused, disciplined – all of those synonyms. The team responded in a great way.”
Once again, Seattle’s defense came through with a stellar performance, limiting Dallas to 41.9 percent shooting (26 of 62) and just 23.5 percent (4 of 17) from behind the arc. It forced 18 Wings turnovers (11 of which were Storm steals) leading to 24 points. And while Arike Ogunbowale finished with 21 points (she averages 23.9), she hit just 6 of 18 from the field in 38:37 of action, thanks primarily to Jordan Horston’s effort to keep her in check.
“I literally texted Noey at the beginning of the year, and I said, ‘Listen – I want to guard the best player,’” Horston said. “I meant that. I bring so much to the table defensively, especially when I’m locked in. I love it. I literally love stopping whoever is in front of me, the best players – whoever. They’re not going to get what they want to get. I take pride in that, and I’m happy that (the coaches) trust me.
“It’s allowing my game to flow. I’m a lot more loose when I’m starting on the defensive end,” Horston added. “It’s just fun for me.”
Ещё видео!