MINNEAPOLIS — Young teams lose games in moments like this, and seven-time WNBA All-Star Cappie Pondexter wasn’t about to let it happen.
Last week, the Fever — make that the 1-16 Fever — were hanging tough in the third quarter against the defending WNBA champion Lynx, winners of seven straight. But three turnovers, the last a shot clock violation, shook their confidence. With the score 39-39 and a timeout called, Pondexter, one of the league’s all-time greats who joined the Fever just two days earlier, thought her new teammates needed pumping up.
“We came in the huddle and everyone was slumped,” Indiana forward Natalie Achonwa said. “Cappie was like, ‘It’s a tie game.’ That just got us sitting back up. Just because a couple of possessions go wrong doesn’t mean we’re not engaged.”
Pondexter checked into the lineup moments later, and an 8-0 Fever run followed, including a short jumper from the veteran guard. The Lynx tied the score again early in the fourth quarter, but Indiana’s 20-8 closing run secured the surprising 71-59 victory. Pondexter, in her first action for the Fever after the Sparks let her go, showed the way, coming off the bench to score eight of her 12 points in the final period.
“We had the momentum from the start of the game,” Pondexter said. “[The Lynx] were on their heels. Sometimes you have to remind them the game is about runs. You’re going to have good runs and bad runs. You have to remember the momentum is on our side. Small things like that.”