You can take all the numbers, all the stats — and there are a lot of them — that will describe how the Lynx offense has evolved, improved. How it has become the best and most efficient three-point attack, so far, in the WNBA.
You can note the team leads the league in field goal percentage, three-point percentage, threes made per game, assists, scoring. How the team has five of the top 15 three-point shooters in the game, including the top two in Kayla McBride and Alanna Smith.
But, to coach Cheryl Reeve, all the numbers come down to this:
Chemistry.
“The movement we get, the sharing of the ball?” Reeve said. “They’re having fun with that part of it.”
The Lynx are 9-3 heading into Friday’s game with Los Angeles at Target Center. They have won two straight, five of their last six, seven of their last nine.
Before the Lynx beat the host Las Vegas Aces on Tuesday, Reeve talked about how different this team was than perhaps some of the other top WNBA teams.
There are so-called “super teams” like New York and Vegas, which has four Team USA Olympians. The Lynx have a superstar in Napheesa Collier. Around her they have constructed a team of quality players who know the game. They all have something to add to the mix, but none of them care who gets credit for the recipe.