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Kevin Pelton, storm.wnba.com
So what has been the Sun's response? Oh, Connecticut merely has posted the WNBA's best
Defensive Rating, surrendering just 93.1 points per 100 possessions. The Sun defense is led by one of the league's best perimeter defenders and its best shot-blocker. The former is
Katie Douglas, who shut down
Sue Bird during the 2004 WNBA Finals and has used her long arms to control many of the league's best perimeter players. In the paint, 7-2
Margo Dydek averages a league-high 2.4 blocks per game (4.3 per 40 minutes). When opposing teams miss, veteran
Taj McWilliams-Franklin has been there to clean it up, averaging a career-high 9.7 rebounds per game to lead the WNBA.
But the Sun's best defense actually might come from the team's group of active reserves. Energetic Australian rookie
Erin Phillips leads the group, with assistance from defensive-minded forwards
Megan Mahoney and
Laura Summerton and backup post
Asjha Jones, who is capable of stepping in for Dydek when other teams exploit her difficulty defending the pick-and-roll.
Mahoney and Summerton have moved into the starting lineup recently with All-Star
Nykesha Sales sitting out the last two games because of hip and Achilles injuries. Sales did not travel to the West Coast with Connecticut, which then saw another All-Star Douglas, miss much of the first half of yesterday's loss to Sacramento with three fouls. The Sun was in the game throughout, but was done in down the stretch by turnovers, finishing with 26 turnovers (Douglas and Whalen had six apiece)
The Seattle Storm comes off a blowout win over the New York Liberty, but the schedule stiffens considerably with the defending champions of both conferences coming to KeyArena over the next three days as the Storm winds up a five-game homestand. The Storm got bad news in Friday's game when reserve wing
Shaunzinski Gortman tore her right ACL late in the game on a fast break. Gortman's absence takes away Anne Donovan's best perimeter defender, though
Iziane Castro Marques and
Tanisha Wright are capable of stepping up.
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Whalen had perhaps her best game of the season against the Storm in Connecticut last month, finishing with 17 points (aided by 11-for-12 free-throw shooting, mostly in the final minute), nine assists and seven rebounds. The All-Star starter seemed on track after three straight double-figure scoring games to start July, but she was limited to six points and two assists by Sacramento's aggressive defense. Bird had 10 points and five assists against the Liberty, controlling the game from the point. | ![]() |
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In her first All-Star appearance, Douglas won MVP honors, scoring a team-high 16 points with four 3-pointers as the East won for the first time ever. Douglas, averaging a career-high 16.0 points per game and shooting 43.8% from 3-point range, has emerged as an outside MVP candidate and has been the best shooting guard in the league this season. 2004 Finals MVP |
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F O R W A R D S |
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One of a pair of Aussies on the Sun's roster, Summerton mostly watched as a rookie but has contributed this season, moving out to small forward. At 6-2, Summerton has good size for the position. She's hit 47.9% of her shots (3-for-3 in her first career start yesterday against the Monarchs for six points) and been strong defensively. UConn grad |
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McWilliams-Franklin enjoyed possibly her best season in 2005 at age 34, scoring a career-high 13.9 points per game. McWilliams-Franklin hasn't been quite as effective as a scorer this season, but she has made up for it on the glass. McWilliams-Franklin was picked for the All-Star Game as an injury replacement, her fifth career appearance. |
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C E N T E R |
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An All-Star for the second time in her career and a starter for the first time, Dydek is averaging 9.9 points, 5.7 rebounds and 2.4 blocks per game. Dydek's 55.7% shooting is the best of her career and good for third in the WNBA. Storm center |
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B E N C H |
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The WNBA's top reserve, Jones (right) averages 11.0 points and 5.4 rebounds per game. McWilliams-Franklin's successor whenever she retires, Jones struggled early in her career when Washington tried to make her a small forward but has thrived since returning to where she played college ball. Though Mahoney and Summerton have started, |
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Connecticut - Forward
Nykesha Sales (sore hip and left Achilles tendon) is out.

