The new rule had Brittney Griner's name on it before she was even in the league.
From the WNBA's offseason meeting came the new defensive three-second rule, designed to keep a player out of the paint unless she is guarding her assigned opponent.
Right away, though, people were calling it the Griner rule, named after the former Baylor center and first-overall WNBA draft pick by Phoenix who will be front and center Thursday when the Mercury faces the Lynx at Target Center. She entered the league with a bigger wingspan than Kevin Love's, hands as big as Kareem Abdul-Jabbar's and all the hype ESPN can muster.
The league took a look at Griner's 748 blocked shots in college and decided it couldn't have her camped in the lane in WNBA games. In a near-unanimous vote — Phoenix was the one team to vote against it — the league changed the rules.
So Griner is now part of an elite group of athletes whose skill and ability have forced games to change. In basketball alone, George Mikan forced the NBA to widen the lane, Wilt Chamberlain forced the lane to grow again and Abdul-Jabbar prompted the NCAA to nix dunking.
"I call her 'Evolution,' " said Lisa Leslie, who should know. The 6-5 Leslie is a four-time Olympic gold medalist, a three-time WNBA MVP, won two league titles and was the first player to dunk in a league game.
"That should be her name," added Leslie, who retired following the 2009 WNBA season.
"She is a player who is 6-8 who is fast. She can dunk with one hand or two. That, right there, is evolution. I helped the game grow, but she has taken it to a new level — no pun intended."