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WNBA: Hammon Takes San Antonio to Finals By Dousing Sparks

(Guru's note: Here's the AP coverage of Sunday's game in the West)

ASSOCIATED PRESS

SAN ANTONIO — When he became coach of the San Antonio Silver
Stars and directed a team that won seven games his first year, Dan
Hughes didn’t have far to look for the role model to build a
championship team.

“My role was right outside my back door,” Hughes said. “You had
the Spurs sitting here. And the things they represented just
reinforced me that even when we won seven games, you know what, keep
going, keep going, keep going.”

Just as the Spurs played for a championship not long after Tim
Duncan joined the team, the Silver Stars’ fortunes changed when Becky
Hammon came on board.

Hammon scored 35 points, making four free throws in the final 36
seconds, and the Silver Stars advanced to their first WNBA finals
with a 76-72 victory over the Los Angeles Sparks in Game 3 of the
Western Conference finals on Sunday.

“We were lucky to get people, and now I’ve got people anybody
could coach,” Hughes said.

Hammon is at the top of the list. In her second year playing with
the Silver Stars after a draft-day trade with New York, Hammon topped
her 32-point performance from last year’s playoffs.

Her 35 points tied for second in WNBA playoff history with the
Sparks’ Lisa Leslie, behind Tameka Whitmore’s 41 points two years ago
while she was playing for Indiana.

The Sparks led 72-67 when Temeka Johnson made two free throws
with 1:57 left in the game, but Hammon tied it on a 3-pointer with
1:03 left.

Hammon was 10-of-18 from the field, including 6-of-8 from 3-point
range, and made all nine foul shots.

“I just try to go up there and knock them down,” Hammon said.
“It’s just repetition. It’s for those moments you work so hard as a
player.”

After Hammon’s 3-pointer, Los Angeles lost the ball the next trip
down the floor when DeLisha Milton-Jones, who joined Candace Parker
to lead Los Angeles with 16 points, was called for an offensive foul.

Hammon followed with four free throws on the next two possessions
to put away the game.

“We come back when things seem impossible,” Hammon said.

The Silver Stars forced Game 3 when Sophia Young hit a turnaround
14-foot jumper that banked off the board and the rim and fell in at
the buzzer on Saturday.

The Sparks missed their final three shots from the floor on
Sunday, going the final 2:16 without a basket.

“I thought our inability to hit key shots during the course of
the game was key for us,” Sparks coach Michael Cooper said. “When we
needed a basket, we couldn’t get it.”

The best-of-five finals will start Wednesday in San Antonio. The
opponent will be determined Monday when Detroit and New York play
Game 3 of the Eastern Conference finals in Ypsilanti, Mich. The Shock
evened the series Sunday with a 64-55 victory.

Hammon, who played in New York from 1999-2006, has a feeling she
will be playing her former team.

“I think New York might be coming out of the East,” Hammon said.
“I hope we do see them.”

The Silver Stars moved to San Antonio in 2003 after six seasons
in Utah. San Antonio lost in the conference finals last year to
eventual champion Phoenix.

With the Spurs ready to start their training camp in two days at
their nearby practice facility, Spurs guard Tony Parker watched with
his wife, Eva Longoria-Parker. They saw the Silver Stars rally from
eight points behind early in the second half to take a one-point lead
with less than a minute to go in the third quarter.

The Sparks took an eight-point lead with 3:39 remaining in the
third quarter when Raffaella Masciadri scored on a drive and made a
free throw after being fouled by Ruth Riley.

But Riley helped San Antonio scored eight straight during the
next 2:01 to tie the game. She hit a 3-pointer and then hit a 14-foot
jump shot to knot it with 1:38 left.

San Antonio took the floor without key reserves Helen Darling and
Edwige Lawson-Wade. Both wore protective boots at the bottom of their
right legs after Darling strained her right calf and Lawson-Wade
sprained her right ankle sprain during Saturday’s Game 2 victory.

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Authors

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Mel Greenberg covers college and professional women’s basketball for the Philadelphia Inquirer, where he has worked for 38 years. Greenberg pioneered national coverage of the game, including the original Top 25 women's college poll. His knowledge has earned him nicknames such as "The Guru" and "The Godfather," as well as induction into the Women's Basketball Hall of Fame in 2007.

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Jonathan Tannenwald is a producer with Philly.com. In addition to covering the local college scene, he spent two years as the Washington Mystics beat writer for Women's Hoops Guru. He also writes his own blog, Soft Pretzel Logic, which covers men's college basketball, football, and a variety of other sports.

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Kathleen Radebaugh is a recent graduate of Saint Joseph's University in Philadelphia. She was the women's basketball beat writer for the school's newspaper, The Hawk, and became the sports editor her sophomore year. She was also a four-year member of the varsity crew team.

Other contributors

-- Erin Semagin Damio covers the University of Connecticut and the WNBA's Connecticut Sun for the blog, and contributes other features. The Storrs, Conn., native also attends Northeastern University, where she is a coxswain on the varsity crew team.

-- Acacia O'Connor is based in Washington, D.C., where she reports on the Mystics and the college basketball scene in the nation's capital. A graduate of Vassar college, she played on the varsity women's basketball team and was editor of the student newspaper.

To read the old version of Women's Hoops Guru, click here.

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This page contains a single entry from the blog posted on September 28, 2008 9:45 PM.

The previous post in this blog was WNBA: Young's Shot For The Ages Saves San Antonio.

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