After four of their stars retired in the wake of their dynastic run, the Lynx could have decided to rebuild.
Maybe this is the time for them to belatedly do so.
They enter Sunday's game in New York with a 2-8 record, a slew of injuries and an offense that too often creates more turnovers than assists.
Their best player in terms of historic impact, Sylvia Fowles, is in her last season. Their best player in her prime, Napheesa Collier, will miss, at least, most of the season because she has a newborn baby. One of their most important players, Damiris Dantas, hasn't played this season, and their only pure, WNBA-caliber point guard, Moriah Jefferson, has already injured her hand and hamstring in her brief stint in Minnesota.
If that sounds like a recipe for rebuilding, here are eight reasons why the Lynx should try to compete rather than play for draft position:
1. Bad starts aren't fatal in the WNBA. Like most leagues, the W has engineered an expanded playoffs. Eight of the league's 12 teams will qualify.
Last year, the Lynx started 0-4 for many of the same reasons they are 2-8 this year — key players arriving late, an abundance of injuries, an in-season search for a commanding point guard. Then they won 22 of their last 28 games, earned the league's No. 3 seed and played host to a playoff game. Recovery is an option.
2. A postseason run remains possible. While the current version of the Lynx is hard to watch, last year the Chicago Sky went through an early seven-game losing streak, lost four of its last six regular-season games, and finished the regular season 16-16.