People talk about Crystal Dangerfield's speed. And you can see it when she's running in transition or coming off a pick to attack the basket. But let's talk about the speed with which Dangerfield went from being the Lynx's second-round draft pick (No. 16 overall) to being the team's go-to player in the 2020 WNBA bubble. How she went from having discussions about having to be patient to being in discussions about being the league's rookie of the year.
Fast.
In the first week of this season's training camp, Lynx coach Cheryl Reeve was reminiscing about Dangerfield's emergence last year. How her flurry of steals and points transformed the season-opening game with Connecticut. How an early injury to center Sylvia Fowles put scoring responsibility on Dangerfield's seemingly slight shoulders.
How the rookie point guard picked up that load and ran with it.
But, as is often the case with Reeve, the other sneaker fell. "I know she got rookie of the year," Reeve said after a recent training camp practice. "But there was so much she didn't do. So there are plenty of places to go for improvement."
Reeve's laundry list: game-changing defense, teammate-enabling assists. Even more rebounding from a 5-5 point guard.
Said Dangerfield: OK.
It's not like Dangerfield refused to do any of that while becoming the first second-round pick in league history to win rookie of the year. It's just that, with almost no training camp and a condensed schedule that allowed for little practice, the 2020 season was a case of learn-on-the-go.