Lindsay Whalen's first foray to the basket cut through the paint and down memory lane. In what could have been her last game at Williams Arena, the former Gopher spun in a turn-back-the-clock reverse layup, waking the echoes, filling the rafters with nostalgic noise.
Whalen scored five of the Lynx's first seven points Tuesday night and wound up leading a team filled with star scorers with 14 points as the Lynx beat the Los Angeles Sparks 70-68 to even the WNBA Finals at a game apiece.
This should have been a night to celebrate, but after she dribbled out the final seconds Whalen wearily flipped the ball to an official and accepted a mobbing by her teammates as if she wanted nothing more than a soft couch and a hard sleep.
She finished with those 14 points, three assists and three rebounds, but couldn't help remember a turnover on the next-to-last possession, when teammate Seimone Augustus seemed to trip as the ball arrived, giving Los Angeles one last chance.
"At that point I was just thankful that we won and it was over," she said. "Because it's been so back and forth. I didn't want to have a turnover on that last possession, as a point guard. And, honestly, I was like, 'Hey, we got this one, on to Game 3. I know how tooth-and-nail this series is. And I was pretty tired at that point."
You could see that in Whalen's face in the fourth quarter, and even as she sat on a podium inside Williams Arena after the game. When Maya Moore answered questions, Whalen rubbed her forehead, thinking and recovering.
"I am thankful," she said, "to have tomorrow off."
There is an inherent contradiction in horror movies and big games. You crave the exquisite agony of suspense, but can only take so much.