The Minnesota Lynx swept the Atlanta Dream Thursday night to clinch their second WNBA championship in three years,
led by several dominant performances from 31-year-old, eight-months pregnant Rebekkah Brunson.
Brunson,
a 6-foot, 2-inch tall, 215-pound power forward who recently entered her
third trimester, averaged 26 points and 14 rebounds in the series and
was by all accounts the Lynx’s biggest threat on both ends of the floor.
“Rebekkah
was really the difference-maker, there’s no question about that,” said
Lynx head coach Cheryl Reeve, adding that Brunson’s low-post game has
drastically improved since putting on 40 pounds over the past few
months. “She did it all—blocking shots, snagging rebounds, and
absolutely dominating in the paint. And I don’t think I’ve ever seen a
player just blow through the lane like that. No one could guard her.”
“When
she threw her weight around down low, she was unstoppable,” Reeve
continued. “Rebekkah was boxing out every other player on the court to
get rebounds, and to do that against a team as good as the Dream was
really something special.”
According to Reeve, Brunson’s
commanding presence in the key and 37-centimeter baby bump set the tone
for Minnesota’s success against Atlanta. In addition to converting a
host of contested layups, Brunson frequently set picks on the perimeter,
leading to a number of wide-open three-pointers for her teammates. The
10-year WNBA veteran whose due date is Nov. 8 also drew nine charges
over the course of three games while on defense.
Furthermore, many
analysts said the highlight of the entire series came when Brunson
knifed through three Dream defenders during a fierce drive to the
basket, which the eight-months pregnant forward finished with an
acrobatic teardrop layup.
“You want to leave it all out there
during the Finals, and Rebekkah did that,” said Lynx forward Maya Moore,
adding that Brunson has been incredibly diligent about taking her
prenatal vitamins before and after every game. “They tried to get
physical and knock her down whenever she drove to the basket, but she’s
so big that she just shrugged off the hits like they were nothing. And
when she dove for that loose ball in the third quarter, it just lifted
the whole team.”
“She was just on a different level,” added Moore.
“No one saw this coming at the beginning of the season when she was
still suffering from morning sickness every day.”
Brunson did have
several obstacles to overcome throughout the series, having to leave
Game 1 for a full quarter due to abdominal cramping. Team sources said
Brunson was also repeatedly forced to sub out of play in order to run to
the locker room and change after lactating through her jersey.
At
one point during Game 2, Brunson reportedly thought she had gone into
preterm labor, but reentered the game several minutes later after
realizing she had only experienced a Braxton Hicks contraction. She was
then rested at the end of the decisive 88-63 victory and watched the
final few minutes while lying on her side next to the bench with a large
pillow between her legs.
Brunson’s regular mood swings, however,
were said to work heavily in Minnesota’s favor, with the 31-year-old
often bursting into tears on defense and angrily ripping the ball out of
a Dream player’s hands for an all-time Finals record 67 steals.
“I
have to hand it to Rebekkah—she was phenomenal, and we couldn’t figure
out a way to contain her on either side of the ball,” said Dream coach
Fred Williams, adding that Brunson was “simply too much” for Atlanta’s
Angel McCoughtry, who is currently only in her second trimester.
“Rebekkah showed amazing tenacity and heart out there. Even when she got
those random food cravings and had to take a timeout to get a few hot
dogs from a vendor in the stands, she got right back on the court and
stepped up when her team needed her.”
“Honestly, I haven’t seen a
performance like that since the 2002 Finals, when Lisa Leslie put up 17
points and 7 rebounds during her 14th hour of labor,” added Williams.
Following
the victory, Brunson went on to collect the WNBA Finals MVP, becoming
just the fifth pregnant player in league history to win the honor.
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