A’ja Wilson helps Aces even WNBA playoff series with Storm
W.G. RAMIREZ
Associated Press
LAS VEGAS (AP) — A’ja Wilson didn’t like the feeling after a Game 1 loss of the semifinals in the WNBA playoffs, scoring just eight points.
She responded with a career playoff-high 33 points and grabbed 12 rebounds to help the Las Vegas Aces beat the Seattle Storm 78-73 in Game 2 on Wednesday night and even the series.
“When I saw the game getting down to the wire I was like, ‘Well, we’re not going to let this happen again,’ I learned my lesson,” Wilson said. “So I don’t necessarily know if it’s possessed, but I just really was locked in for my team. I needed to be the anchor that I was before and being consistent into what got us here.”
Chelsea Gray finished with 19 points, seven rebounds, and seven assists for the Aces, while Kelsey Plum added 18 points.
Game 3 is Sunday in Seattle.
“At end of the day we knew what we had to do. We had to take care of home,” Wilson said. “We should have lost by more in Game 1. We went back to film room and got into the lab.”
Seattle battled back behind Breanna Stewart, who led the Storm with 32 points and seven rebounds. The Storm got within 75-73 on Sue Bird’s runner in the lane that she banked in with 19.9 seconds left.
Wilson hit two free throws 2 seconds later and Seattle didn’t threaten after that.
“I was just locked in. Had to be locked in for my team,” Wilson said. “Can’t be like who I was before.”
Wilson took over in the second half of Game 2. With the game tied heading into the third quarter, she scored 13 points in the period to help the Aces take a 60-52 lead.
“I don’t even remember the third quarter because I was just that locked in because I need to be that for my team,” Wilson said.
Though the Storm were a perfect 11 for 11 from the free-throw line, coach Noelle Quinn expressed disappointment her players didn’t get as many calls as the Aces, who hit 18 of 23 free-throw attempts.
“I thought that our posts were doing an excellent job of getting into the paint,” she said. “I thought they were doing everything right, except for getting to the free-throw line and getting the calls.”
The Aces came out of the chute an entirely different team from the one that looked stagnant in the first quarter of Game 1, taking a 14-11 lead midway through. But after making 7 of 13 to start the game, the Aces missed their last five shots in the quarter. The Storm, however, used a 10-0 run to close the period and took a 23-16 lead into the second.
The second quarter quickly turned into a battle of MVP candidates, as Stewart scored Seattle’s first six points of the second quarter, while Wilson scored eight of Las Vegas’ first 13. The Aces used an 11-2 run to tie the game at 31. The teams went into halftime knotted at 36.
“We had a lot of a lot of opportunities to kind of get the game back on our side and take momentum,” Stewart said. “We knew that they were going to come out guns blazing. They had to, they don’t want to go down 0-2. But we’re going to continue to learn from this game. We’re going home and look forward to really playing back in front of our fans.”
TIP-INS
The Aces missed five free throws, marking just the second time in nine games they missed three or more from the free-throw line. … Wilson’s tally marked the first time she hit the 30-point plateau since June 11 in Los Angeles. … After averaging 14 points against Washington in the opening round, Sue Bird is averaging a mere 4.0 points per game vs. the Aces. Bird is also averaging 9.0 assists per game in the series, and 7.5 for the playoffs. … Seattle had won the last 13 playoff games that Stewart played in before the loss Wednesday night. … It was the third time in WNBA playoff history that two players scored 30 or more points in a game.
AWARDS NIGHT
WNBA commissioner Cathy Engelbert was on hand for the game and presented three trophies before the opening tip. Aces coach Becky Hammon was honored as Coach of the Year, Wilson was given her Defensive Player of the Year award, and Jackie Young received her Most Improved Player trophy.
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