About 30 minutes before the Lynx were supposed to board the bus for their game Wednesday, the news broke.
In the wake of the Jacob Blake shooting Sunday in Kenosha, Wis., the NBA's Milwaukee Bucks weren't going to play their playoff game against the Orlando Magic.
What occurred over the next few hours has changed the way we look at sports, and the way athletes balance the games they play and the causes they believe in.
Soon the entire NBA playoff slate Wednesday was postponed. By the time the Lynx got to the arena at the IMG Academy in Bradenton, Fla., captains Sylvia Fowles and Napheesa Collier were huddling with their teammates and with other teams in the arena. Washington, Atlanta and Los Angeles were already there.
What should they do?
"We wanted to stand together as a league," Collier said. "When we got there, we joined them, and it was really hard. There was a lot of back and forth."
Ultimately, the decision: No games, a pause in the 22-game season that continued into a day of reflection Thursday.
The Lynx beat Atlanta 88-79 Friday in the first WNBA action since Tuesday. The postponed game against the Los Angeles Sparks has been rescheduled for 9 p.m. Monday, the WNBA announced Friday.