On draft night, Carlie Wagner and Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve sat down and talked.
Wagner, the University of Minnesota star, had just been taken by the Lynx in the third round. She was joining a team that, by the time training camp started Sunday, is extraordinarily deep at guard.
Reeve's message: "The first thing she told me was not to come in with the attitude of I have to make the team,'' Wagner said. "You won't play your best. You'll stress yourself out. It's just a lot more work if you think that way."
Wagner's odds are long. The Lynx have Lindsay Whalen and Seimone Augustus starting; and Tanisha Wright, Danielle Robinson and second-year player Alexis Jones — last year's first-round pick — off the bench.
Indeed, for any young, untested player, making what likely will be an 11-player final roster will be difficult, though the situation for backup forwards and centers is a little less set. But for Wagner, rookie forward Jill Barta, forward Breanna Richardson (who is at her second Lynx camp) and others, the goal should be to make an impression.
Reeve wants them to not worry, be themselves, play well enough that the Lynx remember them.
"It's a process,'' Reeve said. "That's what we want to impress on the young players. It's a tough nut to crack; this league is not easy to get into. But you want to get a knowledge bank on each of these players.''
Reeve offered two examples. Jessica Adair was cut from Lynx training camp in 2010. She stayed in shape, and was called back at the end of the regular season. She played well enough to get into training camp in 2011, made the team and now owns a WNBA championship ring. Same thing with former Gophers star Shae Kelley, who was brought back during the 2015 season and was part of another Lynx title team.