Here is further evidence of how far the Lynx have come in the past two-plus weeks:
Wednesday, in a matinee vs. Chicago in a Target Center filled with 11,103 fans — many of them screaming kids — the Lynx saw a nine-point, fourth-quarter lead evaporate in a cloud of missed shots and turnovers, going nearly five minutes without scoring a point.
But this time it wasn't a problem.
Down a point with 1 minute, 12 seconds left after Allie Quigley had cut through the lane for a layup, the Lynx did what they had to do to pull out an 81-78 victory. They scored, they got stops, forcing Quigley, the reigning WNBA three-point shooting contest winner, to miss twice in the final 10 seconds.
The Lynx (8-15) have now won two in a row against the league's top two teams. They've won five of their past seven. The team heads into the All-Star break in a much better place than it was a month ago.
"We're turning the corner,'' said Aerial Powers, who led all scorers with 22 points. She has 54 in the past two, victories over Las Vegas and Chicago. "A little late. … But we are where we always thought we would be.''
The Lynx still are mired low in the standings, 11th in the 12-team WNBA. But they are 2½ games out of the final playoff spot.
And they are trending upward. As coach Cheryl Reeve said, they're finding an identity on defense.