Because the Lynx weren't well-equipped to make them pay for it last year, opponents made center Sylvia Fowles pay.
Fowles almost always was guarded by two defenders, sometimes three, during games in 2019. Sometimes even getting the ball to her was a problem, with forced passes often becoming turnovers. While assembling the 2020 roster, General Manager and coach Cheryl Reeve was determined to change that.
Reeve is determined to push the Lynx along the path basketball in general and the WNBA in particular has been going for years. She wants more shooters on the court, more spacing on the offensive end, more three-pointers taken and made.
"You look at our starting five last year," Reeve said in a conference call Tuesday. "It didn't scream spacing. We spent the season trying to be creative in different ways to score."
It wasn't so much a problem in the past. For years Reeve had Lindsay Whalen, one of the best point guards in the league, calling plays. She had great shooters in Maya Moore and Seimone Augustus forcing defenses to pick their poison, Fowles in the post with power forward Rebekkah Brunson.
Whalen is coaching the Gophers, Brunson is a Lynx assistant with Reeve. Moore's career is still on hold and Augustus is in Los Angeles.
So Reeve has adapted. Last year the Lynx were 10th in the 12-team league in three-pointers taken (17.5) and made (5.8) per game and ninth with a 33.2 three-point shooting percentage. Power forward Damiris Dantas as a starter and Lexie Brown off the bench led the team with 4.1 attempted threes per game.
"She was half our three-point shooting last year," Reeve said of Dantas. "If she didn't shoot 10 a game we had a hard time getting to 20 attempts. In this day and age, that's not going to work."