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2024 WNBA Finals

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Championship series of the 2024 WNBA season

2024 WNBA Finals
TeamCoachWins
New York LibertySandy Brondello3
Minnesota LynxCheryl Reeve2
DatesOctober 10 – 20
MVPJonquel Jones
Eastern finalsNew York Liberty defeatedLas Vegas Aces 3–1
Western finalsMinnesota Lynx defeatedConnecticut Sun 3–2
← 2023WNBA Finals2025 →

The2024 WNBA Finals, officially theWNBA Finals 2024 presented byYouTube TV for sponsorship reasons, was the best-of-five championship series for the2024 season of theWomen's National Basketball Association (WNBA). The finals featured the first-seededNew York Liberty, who advanced to their second straight finals, and the second-seededMinnesota Lynx. The Liberty defeated the Lynx in five games, winning their first WNBA Championship in franchise history.[1]

This was the lastWNBA Finals to use the best-of-five format as it expanded to a best-of-seven format in2025.[2]

Road to the Finals

[edit]

Standings

[edit]
#Team W L PCT GB Conf. Home Road Cup
1yxNew York Liberty328.80016–416–416–45–0
2cxMinnesota Lynx3010.750214–616–414–64–1
3xConnecticut Sun2812.700414–614–614–64–1
4xLas Vegas Aces2713.675512–813–714–62–3
5xSeattle Storm2515.625713–714–611–94–1
6xIndiana Fever2020.5001211–912–88–123–2
7xPhoenix Mercury1921.4751310–1010–109–113–2
8xAtlanta Dream1525.375177–138–127–131–4
9eWashington Mystics1426.350187–135–159–111–4
10eChicago Sky1327.325195–156–147–131–4
11eDallas Wings931.225236–147–132–180–5
12eLos Angeles Sparks832.200245–155–153–172–3

Notes

(#) – League Standing
c – Commissioner's Cup winners
y – Regular Season Champion
x – Clinched playoff berth
e – Eliminated from playoff contention
Source:Overall standings andCommissioner's Cup Standings


Playoffs

[edit]
Main article:2024 WNBA playoffs
First round
Best-of-3
Semifinals
Best-of-5
Finals
Best-of-5
         
1New York Liberty2
8Atlanta Dream0
1New York Liberty3
4Las Vegas Aces1
4Las Vegas Aces2
5Seattle Storm0
1New York Liberty3
2Minnesota Lynx2
2Minnesota Lynx2
7Phoenix Mercury0
2Minnesota Lynx3
3Connecticut Sun2
3Connecticut Sun2
6Indiana Fever0
  • Bold – Series winner
  • Italic – Team with home-court-advantage

In November 2021, the WNBA Board of Governors formalized a new playoff system that would structure the 2022 playoffs onward. The new playoff format scraps the single-elimination games of the first two rounds in favor of a best-of-3 quarterfinal round. As a result, all eight playoff teams, seeded according to overall regular season record regardless of conference (1 vs. 8, 2 vs. 7, 3 vs. 6, 4 vs. 5), will begin postseason play in the first round. Since2016, seeds 3 and 4 received a bye to the second round (single game) and seeds 1 and 2 received a bye to the semifinals (best-of-5). In the first round series, the higher seeded team will host games 1 and 2, and the lower seeded team will host game 3 if necessary. In the semifinal round, no reseeding will take place, which means the winners of the 1 vs. 8 series will be paired with the winner of the 4 vs. 5 series as will the winners of the 2 vs. 7 and 3 vs. 6 series. The semifinal and final rounds will remain best-of-5 series in which the higher seeded team hosts games 1, 2 and (if necessary) 5 while the lower seeded team hosts games 3 and (if necessary) 4.[3]

TheNew York Liberty qualified for the finals after finishing first in the regular season standings with a 32–8 regular season record. They defeated theAtlanta Dream 2–0 in the first round and theLas Vegas Aces 3–1 in the Semifinals. This was the Liberty's second appearance in the finals since2002, and sixth overall.

TheMinnesota Lynx qualified for the finals after finishing second in the regular season standings with a 30–10 regular season record. They defeated thePhoenix Mercury 2–0 in the first round and theConnecticut Sun 3–2 in the Semifinals. This was the Lynx seventh overall appearance in the finals, which is the most all time.

Summary

[edit]

The Liberty and the Lynx faced-off in the finals as the first and second overall seeds. This is the second year in a row where the top two seeds qualified for the finals. The Lynx won the regular season series between the two teams two games to one, and defeated New York in the2024 WNBA Commissioner's Cup. The Liberty entered the series with two extra days of rest as they wrapped their Semifinal series on October 6, while the Lynx had to play a Game Five on October 8.

Game 1

[edit]
Courtney Williams's four-point play with 5.5 seconds remaining

The Finals started in New York with the Liberty dominating the first quarter, winning 32–19. Minnesota trailed by as many as eighteen-points in the second quarter, but won the quarter 17–12. The Liberty took an eight-point lead into halftime. The Lynx cut the lead to seven after winning a close third quarter 25–24. The Lynx turned it up in the fourth quarter, winning 23–16 in order to forceovertime.Courtney Williams had a four point play with 5.5 seconds left to put the Lynx up by one, butBreanna Stewart could only make one of two free throws with the final play of regulation. This was the first game since game two of the2021 Finals to go into overtime. In a close frame, the Lynx stole an away win by winning overtime 11–9. The Lynx were the first team in playoff history to be down 15+ points in the final five minutes and come back to win the game.[4][5]

Right before tip-off of Game 1

The Lynx were led by Courtney Williams, who scored twenty-three points, and they had four players score in double figures.Kayla McBride scored twenty-two points,Napheesa Collier scored twenty-one points, andNatisha Hiedeman scored ten points, in just thirteen minutes of playing time. The Liberty also had four players score in double figures, and were led byJonquel Jones who scored twenty-four points.Sabrina Ionescu scored nineteen points, Breanna Stewart scored eighteen points, andLeonie Fiebich scored seventeen points. Jones recorded ten rebounds to have the firstdouble-double of the finals. Other stats revealed how close the game was with the Lynx winning points in the paint 42–36, bench points 15–10, and the turnover battle 12–15. However, the Liberty were ahead in fast break points 19–17 and rebounds 44–32.[6]

The game had the largest television viewing audience of any WNBA Finals Game 1 with 1.1 million viewers and 1.5 million at the peak.[7]

October 10
8:00 p.m.
New York Liberty 93,Minnesota Lynx95 (OT)
Scoring by quarter:32–19, 12–17, 24–25, 16–23Overtime: 9–11
Pts:Jonquel Jones (24)
Rebs:Jonquel Jones (10)
Asts:Fiebich/Laney-Hamilton/Vandersloot (4)
Pts:Courtney Williams (23)
Rebs:Alanna Smith (9)
Asts:Courtney Williams (5)
Barclays Center
Attendance: 17,732
Referees: Isaac Barnett (Crew Chief), Eric Brewton (Referee), Jenna Reneau (Umpire), Fatou Cissoku-Stephens (Alternate)

Game 2

[edit]

Game two in New York began with the Liberty coming out strong and going on a 12–0 run. They would end up winning the first quarter 31–21. The Lynx came back in the second quarter and it finished even at 18–18. The Liberty lead by as many as seventeen in the first half, and took a ten-point lead into halftime. The third quarter was low-scoring and the Lynx prevailed 14–12 to cut the Liberty's lead to eight heading into the final frame. The Lynx cut the lead to three points during the fourth quarter, but ultimately the Liberty pulled away and won the fourth quarter 19–13 and took the game by fourteen points. The Liberty evened the series at one game a piece in front of the largest crowd to ever attend a Liberty game at theBarclays Center, with 18,046 fans.[8][9]

The Liberty had four players score in double figures and were led byBreanna Stewart who scored twenty-one points.Betnijah Laney-Hamilton scored twenty,Sabrina Ionescu added fifteen, andJonquel Jones had fourteen points. Stewart recorded seven steals to set the record for steals in a WNBA Finals game. The Lynx had three players score in double figures, and were led byNapheesa Collier who scored sixteen points.Courtney Williams scored fifteen points, andAlanna Smith scored fourteen points. As in game one, the Lynx won the points in the paint battle 34–28. Both benches contributed little as the Liberty's bench scores more points, 7–5. The Liberty scored twenty-six points off the Lynx' twenty turnovers, and the Lynx scored seventeen points off the Liberty's sixteen turnovers. The Liberty won the rebounding battle 34–27.[10]

This game had the most viewers of any WNBA Finals game on ABC with 1.34 million viewers and a peak of 1.82 million viewers.[11] This audience is 93% higher than last year's finals average for ABC. It was the most viewed WNBA Finals game in 23 years.[11]

October 13
3:00 p.m.
New York Liberty80, Minnesota Lynx 66
Scoring by quarter:31–21, 18–18, 12–14,19–13
Pts:Breanna Stewart (21)
Rebs:Jonquel Jones (9)
Asts:Ionescu/Stewart (5)
Pts:Napheesa Collier (16)
Rebs:Napheesa Collier (8)
Asts:Courtney Williams (8)
Barclays Center
Attendance: 18,046
Referees: Roy Gulbeyan (Crew Chief), Randy Richardson (Referee), Tiara Cruse (Umpire), Fatou Cissoku-Stephens (Alternate)

Game 3

[edit]

The series moved to Minnesota for game three and the Lynx took advantage of having the home court, winning the first quarter 28–18. The Liberty's defense improved in the second quarter, and they limited the Lynx to fifteen points in the quarter, and the Liberty scored seventeen to win the quarter. The Lynx lead by as many as fifteen in the first half and took an eight-point lead into halftime. The Liberty stormed out of the halftime break and won the third quarter 26–19 to cut the lead to one-point. The game continued to be back and forth during the fourth quarter andSabrina Ionescu hit a three-point shot with one second remaining to secure the quarter and the game for the Liberty. The Liberty won the fourth quarter 19–15 and game three by three points. The Liberty drew within one game of winning their first WNBA title in front of a record crowd of 19,521 at theTarget Center.[12][13]

The Liberty had four players score in double figures, and were led byBreanna Stewart who scored thirty points.Leonie Fiebich, Sabrina Ionescu, andJonquel Jones all scored thirteen points. Stewart grabbed eleven rebounds to earn her first double-double of the finals. The Lynx also had four players score in double figures, and were led byNapheesa Collier with twenty-two points.Kayla McBride added nineteen points,Bridget Carleton scored fourteen points, andCourtney Williams scored twelve points. Game three saw the points in the paint tied at twenty eight, the Lynx led in fast break points 11–5, the Liberty won bench points 9–8 and the Lynx won the turnover battle 10–16. The rebounding battle was much closer as well, with the Liberty winning 33–32.[14]

ESPN, TSN1/3/4[a]
October 16
8:00 p.m.
Minnesota Lynx 77,New York Liberty80
Scoring by quarter:28–18, 15–17, 19–26, 15–19
Pts:Napheesa Collier (22)
Rebs:Napheesa Collier (9)
Asts:Courtney Williams (8)
Pts:Breanna Stewart (30)
Rebs:Breanna Stewart (11)
Asts:Sabrina Ionescu (6)
Target Center
Attendance: 19,521
Referees: Maj Forsberg (Crew Chief), Tim Greene (Referee), Angelica Suffren (Umpire), Randy Richardson (Alternate)

Game 4

[edit]

Game four began with the Lynx facing elimination at home. The first quarter was a very back and forth affair and the quarter ended tied at 23. The second quarter did little to separate the teams and the Lynx won the quarter 23–22 to take just a one-point lead into halftime. The third quarter was a lower scoring affair, but did nothing to separate the teams, as it ended tied at 18. Defense continued to dominate a tight fourth quarter, and the Lynx prevailed in the quarter 18–17. The Lynx won game four by two points and forced a game five in New York. Defense was key for the Lynx as they held the Liberty starsBreanna Stewart andSabrina Ionescu to a combined 10–36 shooting. The two were also 0–9 on three point attempts.Bridget Carleton was fouled with two seconds remaining, and made both shots. The Liberty had possession to end the game, but Ionescu was unable to make another game-winning shot.[15][16]

The Lynx had all five starters score in double figures, and were led byKayla McBride who scored nineteen points.Courtney Williams scored fifteen points,Napheesa Collier scored fourteen points, and both Bridget Carleton andAlanna Smith contributed twelve points. All five Liberty starters also scored in double figures and they were led byJonquel Jones who scored twenty-one points. RookieLeonie Fiebich scored nineteen points, Breanna Stewart scored eleven points, and both Sabrina Ionescu andBetnijah Laney-Hamilton scored ten points. Stewart recorded eleven rebounds for her second double-double of the finals. The Liberty again won the rebounding battle 40–31, they also won fast break points 12–11, and points in the paint 38–26. The Lynx won the turnover battle 12–15, bench points 10–9, and scored more points off turnovers 19–10.[17]

ESPN,TSN2
October 18
8:00 p.m.
Minnesota Lynx82, New York Liberty 80
Scoring by quarter: 23–23,23–22, 18–18,18–17
Pts:Kayla McBride (19)
Rebs:Napheesa Collier (9)
Asts:Courtney Williams (7)
Pts:Jonquel Jones (21)
Rebs:Breanna Stewart (11)
Asts:Fiebich/Ionescu (5)
Target Center
Attendance: 19,210
Referees: Isaac Barnett (Crew Chief), Eric Bretton (Referee), Tiara Cruse (Umpire), Randy Richardson (Alternate)

Game 5

[edit]

The deciding game five in New York began with the Lynx dominating the first quarter, winning 19–10. New York clawed back in the second quarter and won the quarter 17–15. The generally low-scoring half saw the Lynx take a seven-point lead into halftime. The Liberty recovered after the break and won the third quarter 20–10 to take a three-point lead into the final frame. However, the Lynx would not give up and won the fourth quarter 16–13, leaving the game tied at sixty. The Lynx led by as many as twelve points in the first half, and led in the final minute of regulation but could not hold off the Liberty. Liberty starsBreanna Stewart andSabrina Ionescu again struggled, going a combined 5–34 from the field. The Liberty won the overtime period 7–2, during which Collier fouled out. The Liberty led the league in three pointers during the regular season, but only managed to make two in game 5, one by Ionescu in the fourth quarter, and one by Fiebich to start overtime. The Liberty won game five by five points to claim their first WNBA title in their sixth finals appearance, which also marked the first championship for a professional basketball team in the New York area since theNew York Nets won their second championship in theABA in1976.[18][19]

The Liberty had four players score in double figures and were led by Finals MVPJonquel Jones who scored seventeen points.Leonie Fiebich,Nyara Sabally, and Breanna Stewart all added thirteen points. Stewart also had fifteen rebounds to record her third double-double of the Finals. The Lynx only had two players score in double figures and were led by Napheesa Collier, who scored twenty-two points.Kayla McBride scored twenty-one points. The Liberty led in points in the paint, 44–38. They won fast break points 4–2, bench points 15–6, and won the turnover battle 12–16. Just as in very other game in the finals, the Liberty won the rebounding battle 44–33.[20] The Liberty got a major boost in game five from their bench, as Nyara Sabally played seventeen minutes, a playoff high. She andKayla Thornton contributed defensively as well.[21]

The game's officiating came under heavy scrutiny, particularly the amount of free throw attempts the Liberty got compared to the Lynx and the foul call on Lynx center Alanna Smith with 5.2 seconds left in regulation, which led to Breanna Stewart making two free throw attempts that led the game into overtime. In the post-game's news conference, Reeve claims the game was stolen from them and called for a third party that should be included in challenges going forward.[22] Several prominent sports media figures as well as NBA and WNBA players such asLeBron James,Damian Lillard,Isaiah Thomas,Shakira Austin, andRex Chapman all criticized the way the referees handled the game, with some pointing out Smith's minimal contact on her foul call and how Stewart traveled the ball up to her.[23] Sabreena Merchant forThe Athletic wrote the officiating will "leave a stain on what was otherwise an incredible series".[24]

ESPN,SN1
October 20
8:00 p.m.
New York Liberty67, Minnesota Lynx 62 (OT)
Scoring by quarter: 10–19,17–15,20–10, 13–16Overtime:7–2
Pts:Jonquel Jones (17)
Rebs:Breanna Stewart (15)
Asts:Sabrina Ionescu (8)
Pts:Napheesa Collier (22)
Rebs:Alanna Smith (8)
Asts:Kayla McBride (5)
Barclays Center
Attendance: 18,090
Referees: Roy Gulbeyan (Crew Chief), Maj Forsberg (Referee), Tim Greene (Umpire), Isaac Barnett (Alternate)

Team rosters

[edit]
2024Minnesota Lynx roster
PlayersCoaches
Pos.No.Nat.NameHeightWeightDOBFromYrs
G/F6CanadaCarleton, Bridget6' 1" (1.85m)190 lb (86kg)1997-05-22Iowa State5
F24United StatesCollier, Napheesa6' 2" (1.88m)185 lb (84kg)1996-09-23Connecticut5
G0FranceÉpoupa, Olivia5' 5" (1.65m)119 lb (54kg)1994-04-30FranceR
G2United StatesHiedeman, Natisha5' 8" (1.73m)135 lb (61kg)1997-02-10Marquette5
F22United StatesHines-Allen, Myisha6' 1" (1.85m)200 lb (91kg)1996-05-30Louisville6
G/F14HungaryJuhász, Dorka6' 5" (1.96m)192 lb (87kg)1999-12-18Connecticut1
G21United StatesMcBride, Kayla5' 10" (1.78m)186 lb (84kg)1992-06-25Notre Dame10
G1United StatesMiller, Diamond6' 3" (1.91m)163 lb (74kg)2001-02-11Maryland1
F35United StatesPili, Alissa6' 2" (1.88m)235 lb (107kg)2001-06-08UtahR
F8AustraliaSmith, Alanna6' 4" (1.93m)180 lb (82kg)1996-09-10Stanford5
G10United StatesWilliams, Courtney5' 8" (1.73m)133 lb (60kg)1994-05-11South Florida8
F9ItalyZandalasini, Cecilia6' 2" (1.88m)175 lb (79kg)1996-03-16Italy2
FFranceHirsch, Maïa (DP)6' 5" (1.96m)2003-11-13France
Head coach
United StatesCheryl Reeve (La Salle)
Assistant coaches
United StatesKatie Smith (Ohio State)
United StatesRebekkah Brunson (Georgetown)
United StatesElaine Powell (LSU)
Athletic trainer
United States Chuck Barta (UW–La Crosse)
Assistant trainer
United States Brandi BlueArm (Minnesota State)

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • Injured Injured

Depth

[edit]
Pos.StarterBench
PGCourtney WilliamsNatisha Hiedeman
Olivia Époupa
SGKayla McBrideDiamond Miller
SFBridget CarletonCecilia Zandalasini
PFNapheesa CollierMyisha Hines-Allen
Alissa Pili
CAlanna SmithDorka Juhász
2024New York Liberty roster
PlayersCoaches
Pos.No.Nat.NameHeightWeightDOBFromYrs
G/F2United StatesBurke, Kennedy6' 1" (1.85m)182 lb (83kg)1997-02-14UCLA4
G1United StatesDavis, Marquesha6' 0" (1.83m)2001-05-29MississippiR
G18CroatiaDojkić, Ivana5' 11" (1.8m)154 lb (70kg)1997-12-24Croatia1
F13GermanyFiebich, Leonie6' 4" (1.93m)2000-01-10GermanyR
G20United StatesIonescu, Sabrina5' 11" (1.8m)165 lb (75kg)1997-12-06Oregon4
C35Bosnia and HerzegovinaJones, Jonquel6' 6" (1.98m)215 lb (98kg)1994-01-05George Washington7
G/F44United StatesLaney-Hamilton, Betnijah6' 0" (1.83m)166 lb (75kg)1993-10-29Rutgers8
C8GermanySabally, Nyara6' 5" (1.96m)204 lb (93kg)2000-02-26Oregon1
G0United StatesSherrod, Jaylyn5' 7" (1.7m)2001-10-21ColoradoR
F30United StatesStewart, Breanna6' 4" (1.93m)170 lb (77kg)1994-08-27Connecticut7
F5United StatesThornton, Kayla6' 1" (1.85m)188 lb (85kg)1992-10-20UTEP8
G22HungaryVandersloot, Courtney5' 8" (1.73m)137 lb (62kg)1989-02-08Gonzaga13
Head coach
AustraliaSandy Brondello (Western Sydney)
Assistant coaches
Germany Olaf Lange
United StatesRoneeka Hodges (Florida State)
United StatesZach O'Brien (Saint Joseph's College of Maine)
Athletic trainer
United States Terri Acosta
Strength and conditioning coach
United States Emily Zaler

Legend
  • (C) Team captain
  • (DP) Unsigned draft pick
  • (FA) Free agent
  • (S) Suspended
  • Injured Injured

Depth

[edit]
Pos.StarterBench
PGCourtney VanderslootIvana Dojkić
Jaylyn Sherrod
SGSabrina IonescuKennedy Burke
Marquesha Davis
SFBetnijah Laney-HamiltonKayla Thornton
PFBreanna StewartLeonie Fiebich
CJonquel JonesNyara Sabally

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^TSN3 will join in progress at 9:00 p.m.

References

[edit]
  1. ^Philippou, Alexa (October 21, 2024)."Liberty title, epic WNBA Finals fitting end to transcendent season".ESPN. RetrievedOctober 21, 2024.
  2. ^Ben Pickman; Jenna West (October 10, 2024)."WNBA Finals moving to best-of-seven format in 2025; playoff first round to have 1-1-1 setup".The Athletic. RetrievedOctober 15, 2024.
  3. ^"WNBA Approves New Playoff Format".WNBA. NBA Media Ventures. RetrievedAugust 4, 2022.
  4. ^Feinberg, Doug (October 11, 2024)."Minnesota Lynx stun New York Liberty with 95-93 overtime win in Game 1 of the WNBA Finals".Associated Press. RetrievedOctober 11, 2024.
  5. ^Feinberg, Doug (October 11, 2024)."Minnesota Lynx win wild Game 1 of the WNBA Finals".Associated Press. RetrievedOctober 11, 2024.
  6. ^"Minnesota Lynx stun New York Liberty with 95-93 overtime win in Game 1 of the WNBA Finals".ESPN. October 10, 2024. RetrievedOctober 11, 2024.
  7. ^"Liberty and Lynx WNBA Finals Was Most Watched Game 1 Ever".Women's Fastbreak On SI. October 11, 2024. RetrievedOctober 13, 2024.
  8. ^Feinberg, Doug (October 13, 2024)."Laney-Hamilton was difference maker for the Liberty in win over Lynx that evened WNBA Finals 1-1".Associated Press. RetrievedOctober 13, 2024.
  9. ^Feinberg, Doug (October 13, 2024)."Breanna Stewart helps New York even WNBA Finals series as Liberty beat Lynx 80-66 in Game 2".Associated Press. RetrievedOctober 13, 2024.
  10. ^"Liberty 80-66 Lynx (Oct 13, 2024)".ESPN. October 13, 2024. RetrievedOctober 13, 2024.
  11. ^abRajan, Ronce (October 15, 2024)."Most-Viewed WNBA Finals Game on ABC Ever".ESPN Press Room U.S. RetrievedOctober 15, 2024.
  12. ^Feinberg, Doug (October 16, 2024)."Ionescu's 3-pointer with 1 second left gives Liberty 80-77 win over Lynx and 2-1 lead in WNBA Finals".Associated Press. RetrievedOctober 17, 2024.
  13. ^Feinberg, Doug (October 16, 2024)."Minnesota can't finish off New York and now must find way to win two straight games for 5th title".Associated Press. RetrievedOctober 17, 2024.
  14. ^"Liberty 80-77 Lynx (October 16, 2024)".ESPN. October 16, 2024. RetrievedOctober 17, 2024.
  15. ^Donnelly, Patrick (October 19, 2024)."Alanna Smith fights through a back injury to help Minnesota Lynx even WNBA Finals".Associated Press. RetrievedOctober 19, 2024.
  16. ^Feinberg, Doug (October 18, 2024)."New York's stars Breanna Stewart and Sabrina Ionescu struggle in Game 4 loss to Minnesota".Associated Press. RetrievedOctober 19, 2024.
  17. ^"Lynx 82-80 Liberty (October 18, 2024)".ESPN. October 18, 2024. RetrievedOctober 19, 2024.
  18. ^Mahoney, Brian (October 21, 2024)."Lynx fall just short after Napheesa Collier leads them to the brink of a fifth WNBA title".Associated Press. RetrievedOctober 21, 2024.
  19. ^Mahoney, Brian (October 21, 2024)."Jonquel Jones delivers WNBA Finals MVP performance to bail out Ice-cold Ionescu and Stewart".Associated Press. RetrievedOctober 21, 2024.
  20. ^"Liberty 67-62 Lynx (October 20, 2024)".ESPN. October 21, 2024. RetrievedOctober 21, 2024.
  21. ^Creme, Charlie (October 20, 2024)."How the Liberty beat the Lynx to win 2024 WNBA championship".ESPN. RetrievedOctober 21, 2024.
  22. ^Philippou, Alexa."Cheryl Reeve blasts officiating, says title 'stolen' from Lynx".ESPN. RetrievedOctober 21, 2024.
  23. ^Pereles, Zachary."WNBA Finals: LeBron James disagrees with controversial call that helped send Liberty-Lynx Game 5 to overtime".CBS Sports. RetrievedOctober 21, 2024.
  24. ^Merchant, Sabreena (October 21, 2004)."Minnesota coach Cheryl Reeve says series 'stolen' after poor officiating in WNBA Finals loss to Liberty".The Athletic. RetrievedOctober 22, 2024.

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