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Storm Use An Early Run To Defeat The Sparks, 79-66

The Seattle Storm and Los Angeles Sparks face each other in Game One of the Western Conference semifinals.

Storm Use An Early Run To Defeat The Sparks, 79-66

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3 Total Updates since August 25, 2010

 

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Storm Mount An Early Lead And Don't Look Back

It wasn’t exactly a “must-win” game, but after losing in the first round of the playoffs for each of the last five seasons the Seattle Storm would have to set a different tone if they wanted to dispel the ghosts of the past.

If there were lingering doubts about the hype around this year being different, the Storm took care of those rather quickly en route to a 79-66 win over the Los Angeles Sparks in front of 10, 589 fans who didn’t even bother with “BEAT-L-A!” chants until things started to sputter in the second half.

“I thought in the first half we had way too many turnovers and we just didn’t take care of the ball and it resulted in a 10-point lead right away,” said Sparks coach Jennifer Gillom. “That’s one thing we took care of in the second, third, fourth quarter, but we just let them get too big a lead in the first quarter.”

While the game started off exactly as a casual fan might expect with Sue Bird getting an assist off a pass to Lauren Jackson in the post, fellow All-Star Swin cash was dominant after that. Cash simply outworked the Sparks in getting down the court, scoring eight of her game-high 20 points in the first quarter off a number of fast-break layups that came primarily as a result of Sparks turnovers.

“Anytime you can turn a team over you can get some easy baskets and they did against us in the second quarter,” said Storm coach Brian Agler. “Swin got some layups and Lauren got us off to a big start. They did a pretty good job on her. Swin was really energetic tonight. She was active and getting out in transition and running the floor. She’s a very, very big competitor and finds a way to get things done. In a lot of ways, she’s the heart and soul of this team.”

Cash also finished with five rebounds while Jackson had 17 points and a game-high nine rebounds. Bird was no small part of their first quarter success, tying a WNBA record with 9 assists in the first half and finished with her highest total of 2010 with 12.

However, as Gillom noted, the Sparks pretty much stopped turning the ball over so often after a rough first quarter — 6 of their 13 total turnovers came in the first 10 minutes. But although the Storm starters were considerably quieter in the second quarter, the Storm played even with the Sparks based on the performance of rookie forward Jana Vesela, who played all 10 minutes and shot 3-for-3 from the three point line and had all 11 of her points when the Sparks stopped turning the ball over.

While some observers may have been surprised by the performance, this is what many of her Storm teammates have been expecting of her.

“She’s very effective in Europe, so to have her come out tonight and hit a couple of threes, she got her hands on a couple of balls, that’s what we’re going to need in this playoff series because she’s so versatile. It’s really hard to match her with a guard, and if a post player is on her she can go to the basket. She just gives us a different look on the offensive end.”

The Storm were able to maintain their 10 point first quarter lead and went into the half up 43-33. While the Sparks ended up getting solid contributions from Marie Ferdinand-Harris who finished with 16 points on 7-of-15 shooting and Tina Thompson finished with 16 points and Kristi Toliver matched that with 16 points on 6-of-9 shooting.

The Storm have maintained that the past had no bearing on this year’s series and that’s pretty much what played out tonight. They have the opportunity to close out their first playoff series win since their 2004 title run on Saturday in Los Angeles at noon.

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Storm's Balanced Attack Overwhelms Sparks, 79-66

The Seattle Storm have talked all year about preparing for this moment and when it arrived they seized it beating the Los Angeles Sparks in Game 1 of the first round 79-66.

The Sparks played the Storm close in KeyArena for the second game in a row but were unable to overcome 56.1% shooting from the field.

And the shots came from all over the field for the Storm. It started early with fast break layups from Swin Cash, continued in the second quarter with Jana Vesela hitting threes, and then Lauren Jackson got going in the second half. Sue Bird did what she does best, dishing out a season-high 12 assists.

The series continues on Saturday at noon in Los Angeles.

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Halftime: Storm Run Sparks To A 43-33 Lead

The Seattle Storm talked all season about focusing on preparing to win a championship by getting through the playoffs and it looks like they’ve accomplished that so far…partially.

The Storm have shot 60%, but are only ahead 11 partially because the Sparks are still able to work the ball around the court and slow the Storm down but also partially because they’re doing a solid job keeping the Storm off the offensive boards.

The huge key for the Storm thus far has been Swin Cash and Jana Vesela — Cash just outworking the Sparks in getting up and down the floor and converting strong at the rim and rookie forward Vesela shooting 3-3 from behind the arc. Tina Thompson has 10 for the Sparks and Kristi Toliver also came off the bench for 10 points and 2-2 shooting from the three point line.

Sue Bird tied a WNBA record with 9 first half assists.

To follow the game, check out the game thread at SBN’s Swish Appeal.

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Storm Focus On Winning Game 1 In New WNBA Playoff Format

In the WNBA's new playoff format, winning Game 1 takes on enormous significance for the higher seed -- lose the first game in a best-of-three series and suddenly you're behind the eight ball for Game 2 on the road.

So even after finishing the regular season with a record-tying 28 wins, Seattle Storm coach Brian Agler's focus on winning tonight (8 pm PST at KeyArena on ESPN2) is not merely an extension of his season-long "tunnel vision". Making sure they get off to a good start in the playoffs is the best way to ensure that the Storm's outstanding regular season doesn't go to waste quickly in the post-season.

"The way the series is set up this year 1-1-1 where before it was 1-2 and the first game of the series is extremely important," said Agler. "It' not a do or die situation but it can really impact the outcome of a short series in a three game series."

After the Sparks played the Storm close on Saturday -- the Storm pulled out a 76-75 win on a shot by Tanisha Wright -- coming in focused and prepared will be a necessity.

Those regular season records won't mean a whole lot when the ball tips tonight.

For more to get you ready for the playoffs:

Seattle Storm WNBA Playoff Push: The Quest For A Title Begins

The Universal Appeal of Chanting "Beat-L-A!" 

StormBasketball.com: Around the Web - Storm playoff previews

What The Storm Learned About The Sparks On Saturday: 'You’re Seeing More Of A Complete Team'

Five Reasons Why Now Is The Time To Give The Seattle Storm A Chance