After the game, Lindsay Whalen was sitting in her chair, smiling, joking, almost giddy.
"I wanted this game," she said. "We all did."
Friday started with the bad news that All-Star Seimone Augustus will be out at least a month following knee surgery. Coming to town? Chicago, the WNBA's highest-scoring team, on a four-game winning streak. First in the East.
So this was important. How would the Lynx, who received the 1-2 punch of losing backup Monica Wright and Augustus in a three-day stretch, respond?
Like this: With an 84-66 victory over Chicago that included a third-quarter that was darn-near perfect. With just about everyone doing just a little bit more, but nobody feeling they had to fill Augustus' shoes by themselves. The Lynx were generous on offense and aggressive on defense.
A week earlier, Chicago ended the Lynx's three-game winning streak. A week later, the Lynx returned the favor.
"I love how unselfish this team is," said Maya Moore, who scored 22 of her 29 points in the second half, and had three steals and three blocks on defense. "I love how we move it, share it, don't care who gets the credit. It's really fun to play."
The mantra before the game was everyone doing a little more. Everyone listened.