Showing posts with label 2024. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2024. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 29, 2024

27 years: the montage edition

27 years. We all we got; we all we need. We all we are; we all we ever, ever were. 

27 years. Roll the tape. And then let's look at the outtakes. 

I start at the beginning, because that's where we started. There is not enough we can do or say for those who dropped the best of their years down the chasm, for whom our beginning was closer to their ending. No number of trophies won by other people can make up for that. There isn't a throng of cheering fans big enough to fill the little gyms in Italy, in Germany, in Japan, in Russia, in other spots all over the world from before Brooklyn was even an option.

They laid the foundation. This 2024 team reached the pinnacle. But you don't get from the foundation to the pinnacle without the floors in the middle. There's history there too, as much as it hurts to look at it. We are not who we are without them, either. 

Because there were Huskies in New York before Breanna Stewart, after Rebecca Lobo. There's something of Kiah Stokes, her old teammate, in the authority of her blocks. There's something of Swin Cash in the imperious tilt of her chin and the swift sure movements of long arms and long legs. There's something of Tina Charles in her, the craving to prove herself on the biggest stage she calls home, even as she's already proven her personal bona fides elsewhere; there too, is Orange County's own Stefanie Dolson and Suffolk County's own Bria Hartley. Pull the camera back a little, and coming home is nothing new to this franchise, from Long Island's Sue Wicks to Manhattan's Bethany Donaphin to the Bronx's Kia Vaughn to Brooklyn's Tanisha Wright. Look shallower into the numbers. We've seen #30 pulling down hard-earned rebounds before as Shea Mahoney fought for boards at MSG, as DeTrina White cleaned the glass on the stage at Radio City. #30's gone from Katelan Redmon on the bench to Katie Smith playing the final leg of her legendary career. We've seen #30 commanding the huddle before, Tanisha Wright pulling the team around her and forcing them to believe. After Breanna, we may never see it again. 

If anyone understands the heavy weight of legacy, it's Betnijah Laney-Hamilton, a player's daughter, a coach's goddaughter. Being in the second generation is nothing new to she who played on the banks of the Raritan, already familiar with the shadows of Sue Wicks and Cappie Pondexter even before her winding road took her to New York. But when she steps out on the floor, the echoes that answer are Essence Carson's and Erica Wheeler's, bringing the defense, willing to sacrifice on the offensive end for the good of the team. I can hardly think of two players less alike than Betnijah and Tamika Whitmore... until I look at the #44 on the front of the jersey. Pull back the focus, off the court to the sounds of someone enthusiastically singing Beyoncé: is that Betnijah or is that Kia Vaughn? In her glitz and glamour while injured, she invokes DiDi Richards, Tiffany Jackson, Shameka Christon. 

If you know your history, and I mean the deep lore, you know who Big 20 is. You know how long he's been with the Liberty, even before he was a Timeless Torch. And maybe the #20 is for Sabrina Ionescu now. But those who were there when the deep magic was written know that #20 was originally for Shameka Christon. Shameka was supposed to be the star who, buttressed and taught by the veterans around her, would take the Liberty to the next level. She was supposed to be the next generation. Instead, her fate was inextricably entangled with that of Cappie Pondexter, a superstar combo guard who could either score in bunches or make herself a selfless passer, but in so many ways never found a balance. Cappie chose New York, and then chose not to choose it. Sabrina, the superstar combo guard looking for- and more and more often finding- that on-court balance between volume scorer and selfless passer, was chosen by New York, and then chose New York. And so #20 goes from the historical footnote of Stacey Ford, to Shameka's potential frustrated and squandered, to Sabrina's ascendance as the star who brought the Liberty to the next level. 

The echoes are a little harder to pinpoint for Courtney Vandersloot, at least until the intros start and the vowels start getting drawn out: Suuuuuuuue, Spooooooooooon, Schuuuuuuuueyyyyyy, Kraaaaaaaaaay, Ekuuuuuuuunwe, Slooooooot. Maybe it's because so much of her history belongs to other cities, like Katie Smith's did, like Swin Cash's did, like Taj McWilliams-Franklin's did. Maybe it's because she's so far from the Evergreen State that made her, following in the footsteps of Leilani Mitchell and Alex Montgomery and Cathrine Kraayeveld. Maybe it's because #22 has so often belonged to easy smiles like Lindsey Yamasaki's and Jessica Bibby's, or the big personalities of Ashley Battle and DeMya Walker, and that's not the vibe for someone who tries to avoid all encounters with people. And maybe that's right for the quintessential pass-first leader: you find her by finding the connections around her. 

Jonquel Jones is one-of-one in so many ways, but the simplest is this: no one else has worn #35 in the regular season for the New York Liberty. Let her stay, let her keep rising, and maybe no one else ever will. The parallels aren't as elegant; the path isn't as smooth. She's not the first from the Atlantic 10, both old and new; before her came Quanitra Hollingsworth and Ta'Shia Phillips. She's not the first from the islands; before her there was Antigua's own Desiree Francis, and before either of them was one of our first, Simone Edwards, the Jamaican Hurricane, and may her memory be a blessing as bright and joyous as she ever was. In her astonishing passing eye, in the angles no center seems to have a right to find, there's a trace of Janel McCarville. In JJ's unabashed, unfettered, unrelenting pride, there too is an echo of Shavonte Zellous, and they've both picked up their pens to write about it

#35 is one-of-one as a jersey number for the New York Liberty. #13 is far from it. #13's been there since the beginning, from our neglected pioneer Sophia Witherspoon, to Marina Ferragut's soft touch in the paint, to the toughness of Mactabene Amachree, to all that never was for Jocelyn Willoughby. Now it's on the back of Leonie Fiebich, and it's an omen of ill fortune for the guard looking up at her. She's not the first German to find her way to New York; there's always going to be a special place in my heart for the sweetness of Linda Fröhlich, for whom I learned how to type diacritical marks, and for Martina Weber, The One Who Made It for the Iona Gaels. But wind it back. It's a short jump back to the phenomenal defensive flexibility of Natasha Howard, inside and out; it's a longer jump back to the backcourt trapping of Sue Wicks and Becky Hammon driving opposing guards mad. There's something of Elena Baranova and Cathrine Kraayeveld in those corner threes, so unexpected from someone of that height and that build. 

And where you find Leonie, you find Nyara Sabally. Because you always seem to find Nyara as part of a pair, don't you? The two Germans, the two Ducks, the two sisters. Bookends, like K.B. Sharp and Erin Thorn waiting outside Radio City. But let Nyara stand alone, too, straight and tall while a would-be defender bounces off her like water off a Duck's back- and there's Cathrine again, setting a Screen of Death to free up a teammate. There's Carolyn Swords, the big body in the paint, making space as defenders run headlong into that #8 jersey. There's another #8 sliding through the gap thus created, Edwige Lawson-Wade finding the seam for the drive and dish. Listen close to the thunder of the "SA-BA-LLY!" chant and there is a hint, an echo, a trace of "OL-GA! OL-GA!", for Olga Firsova, a folk hero on a smaller scale than Nyara ever was. 

In so many ways, Kayla Thornton fits into the history of this team. #5 has belonged to an eclectic mix of players, from defensive specialist Kisha Ford, to the faded glory of Venus Lacy, to Grace Daley who we don't talk about, to the sharpshooter Erin Thorn, to deceptively diminutive Leilani Mitchell, to the one-year-wonder of Shoni Schimmel, to Chelsea Hopkins, to Kia Nurse. It seems appropriate that Kayla, herself an eclectic mix, should follow in their collective footsteps. But we have to go deeper than the commonality of a jersey number or the alma mater she shares with Natasha Lacy to find Kayla's predecessors. There's something to be said for her off-court unpredictability, the kind of quirkiness that's made Ashley Battle a long-time favorite fondly remembered out of proportion to her skill and role. Go further still, and beneath the lightness of seafoam there has always been steel, deep in the heart. There's Kayla fighting for a loose ball; there's Tiffany Jackson-Jones battling on the glass; there's Plenette Pierson, ferociously boxing out. 

The easiest parallel to Jaylyn Sherrod is Chucky Jeffery, the Colorado alumna who wore 0 before Jaylyn did. Easy- but New York doesn't do easy. Wouldn't have taken 27 years to get here if we did. New York never stops moving, never stops hustling, never gives up. It's no wonder Liberty fans took a shine to Jaylyn and the energy she bursts with. Give us the speedsters who never learned how to stop, blurring behind her like an afterimage as she breaks to the basket: Jazmine Jones, Brittany Boyd, Sydney Colson, Sherill Baker, Jessica Bibby.   Give us the ones who beat the odds, like Erica Wheeler, like Sami Whitcomb, like DeMya Walker, like Becky Hammon, who chose instead of being chosen, seized that chance with both hands, and whether here or elsewhere, raised it up like a trophy to the heavens.

Kennedy Burke's far from the first Bruin to cross the country and lace them up for the Liberty; Lisa Willis and Nikki Blue blazed that trail before her. And her number of choice is far from illustrative, or so we hope; #2 has a star-crossed history, from the misuse of Shay Doron to the warped and twisted intensity of Candice Wiggins to the travails of Adut Bulgak. No, that's not Kennedy's legacy either. We find her precedents on the waiver wire, in long trails of transaction history. We find her in Reshanda Gray pulling down a contested rebound, in Avery Warley-Talbert boxing out a taller opponent, in La'Keshia Frett sending back a shot with extreme prejudice, in the experience of Barbara Farris leading from the bench. We find Kennedy's place within Liberty history in a litany of places, in a suitcase, in a passport stamp.

What do you say of a player you've hardly seen? How do I draw from the past to illustrate Marquesha Davis's present? I can't turn to the surface-level similarities, not when #1 has a history shorter and scanter than almost any number not in the Ring of Honor thanks to Maddie wearing it for so long, not when the only other Rebel we've had was of the Nevadan variety. Among the youngest of our players, we look not to the future, but to the concept of the future, to everything we've ever hoped for our first-round picks, whether they soared like Shameka Christon, or were cruelly grounded like AD Durr, or were potential we never developed like Toni Young. In that slow Southern drawl, there's echoes too: Shameka again, another daughter of the Gemstone State; Tupelo's own Tamika Whitmore; so many others who called the Southeast home. 

We got to see flashes of what Ivana Dojkić showed more consistently elsewhere. Is it fair to try and fit her into place based solely on those? Two simple ties anchor her to Liberty history: the second #18, following Lorela Cubaj; the second Croatian, following Korie Hlede. I keep wanting to look deeper. Surely there's a better match. If the bigger picture doesn't work, snapshots will: the 14-point win against Chicago, where we needed every one of her 12 points and her single steal. "Next man up": everyone has their day, like Stefanie Dolson going completely unconscious from three, like Erin Thorn and the two halfcourt heaves, like Bethany Donaphin and the jump shot. It's a good day when you don't need that kind of day, but there's something to be said for those who stay ready. 

A lot of Liberty fans were politely bemused during the championship celebrations when Rebekah Gardner was brought out on stage with the rest of the team, despite never spending a second on the active roster. But they also serve who stand and wait, or so Milton wrote. (John, not DeLisha.) There's Kamiko Williams in the stands with her crutches; there's Carolyn Jones-Young, working her way back through an ACL tear, more known in Liberty history for who she wasn't than what she ever did; there's Simone Edwards on the developmental roster, watching, learning, waiting. Bek had to do a lot of waiting, too, waiting and working overseas for most of her prime until she finally got a chance to play in the US at 31. So many of the originals can relate to that; after all, in 1997, they were all rookies, even 31-year-olds like Trena Trice and Teresa Weatherspoon. And it's almost become a recurring joke how often players who share her name, albeit in a more familiar spelling, have found their way to New York: Rebecca Richman in the draft, Rebecca Allen through international free agency, Rebecca Hammon as a legendarily undrafted rookie (even if she does persist in going by Becky)... and we end where we began, the last to the first: Rebecca Lobo, one of the first players to put faith in the WNBA, one of the first to wear Lady Liberty's torch over her heart. 

So roll the tape. And then look between the frames. Between Kym and Nyara posting up, you might catch a glimpse of Jessica Davenport. Between Spoon's braids and Jaylyn's locks flying in the air, you might see Loree Moore's braids whip around. Off camera, between Sloot's pass and Crystal's finish, maybe Kara Braxton's screening off a defender. Pan instead of cut. Pull the camera back. 

History can be a chain if we let it be, if we let six years and one year define all twenty-seven. Looking too far to the past risks overlooking the moments in the middle, the ones that have shaped this team as much as any others. The zenith at Barclays would not be as high without the nadir of Westchester; the championship would not be as sublime without the ridiculousness of Radio City; the homecoming to Brooklyn would never have felt so sweet without the years in Newark. This title belongs, first and foremost, to the players who earned it on the floor, and then to those they choose to share it with. But we can't say that only the trailblazers matter. It's a disservice to the players who were never given the chance to enjoy the bright lights to leave them in the shadows. We all we got/we all we need means all.

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Saturday, October 26, 2024

27 years: the jump cut edition

27 years. We all we got; we all we need. We all we are; we all we ever, ever were.

27 years. Roll the tape. And then let's go behind the scenes.

It's 1997. I'm 12 years old. My mother, the sports fan in the family, is dragging me to MSG for the New York Liberty's first ever home game. The place is almost sold out. The energy is through the roof. Michele Timms's platinum hair shines so bright under the lights. The Liberty win.

It's 2024. I'm 40 years old. Barclays Center is sold out to the rafters. The energy is through the roof. The lights are so bright. The Liberty win.

It's 1998. My mom and I are bringing friends to games to have something in common with them. G goes to one; T goes to another.

It's 2024, and T and I are both season subscribers, connecting after close to twenty years out of contact. She meets my husband; I meet her wife.

It's 1999. Rebecca Lobo plants, twists, crashes. The Garden shakes and goes quiet, unable to process.

It's 2024. Rebecca Lobo is courtside at the broadcast table, quiet, unable to process. Barclays is shaking and roaring.

It's 1999. A pass-first, defensive-minded point guard has just hit the most iconic shot the franchise has ever seen.

It's 2024. A shoot-first, offensive-minded point guard is making the right pass at the right time and playing one of the best defensive games of her life.

It's 2001. Our front office is expecting us to believe that the only lesbian associated with the New York Liberty is Carol Blazejowski.

It's 2024. The Finals MVP is at center court kissing the adorably tiny woman she's going to marry one of these days, and two of her teammates have their wives on court to celebrate with them.

It's 2002. Sue Wicks is hitting a corner three, anything to keep her team alive in this game. It's not enough, and two days later Nikki Teasley drives home the dagger to send the Liberty home as bridesmaids again.

It's 2024. Sue Wicks is sitting, and mostly standing, courtside, to see the Liberty no longer be left as bridesmaids.

It's 2003. The game against the Comets hasn't started yet and we're hanging out at the Garden, fans just talking and telling stories as the players arrive for shootaround. I'm collecting autographs; he's trying to pick up a girl.

It's 2024. He's asleep in our bed, wrapped in my favorite quilt. The other girl has moved from another country to another state, but she flies out for every Finals game in New York, and after Game 5 we meet her girlfriend.

It's 2003. Liberty fans are irrationally superstitious about the new blue jerseys.

It's 2024. Liberty fans are irrationally superstitious about the new white jerseys.

It's 2004. A'riel is seven days old, the tiniest speck of a human slung in a papoose on her mother's broad back as they ride the escalator to the club seats.

It's 2024. A'riel is a junior in college. She wears her mother's number, she has her mother's eyes, and thanks to conference realignment, she'll visit her mother's alma mater in 2025.

It's 2004. The Liberty and the Shock are playing the first game at Radio City. Detroit's Swin Cash chases a loose ball upstage right and upstages herself straight into the orchestra pit.

It's 2024. Former Liberty player and front office exec Swin Cash pulls Teresa Weatherspoon into the spotlight, choosing to be upstaged.

It's 2004. Bethany Donaphin hits a little jumper and sends the Garden into ecstatic chaos.

It's 2024. Bethany Donaphin works for the league office, and there's a woman in a pink suit who looks an awful lot like her trying to bring order to the ecstatic post-game chaos.

It's 2005. We're hanging out down by the rail, getting autographs and wishing our players good luck. Cards are still at the fringe of being cheap, and I bring extras for the kids.

It's 2024. One of those kids has, for reasons I still don't understand, moved to Kentucky. He's hosting a viewing party for Game 5 at his house. There's 40 people there. He's not one of them. He flew home to be with his people, in that place, at that time, for that moment.

It's 2006. The official Liberty website is telling us to push our Robinson and Baranova jerseys to the back of the closet because the players have moved on.

It's 2024. Crystal Robinson is wearing her jersey on a championship float coming down the Canyon of Heroes, reunited with her teammates. There isn't a closet in sight.

It's 2007. The kids are trying. They love each other, but it's not enough.

It's 2024. They're not kids, but they're trying. They love each other. It's finally enough.

It's 2008. Essence Carson, growing into a fan favorite, brings the trademark Rutgers lock-down defense.

It's 2024. Betnijah Laney-Hamilton, long grown into a fan favorite, brings the trademark Rutgers lock-down defense.

It's 2009. The Liberty earn the #1 pick in the 2010 WNBA draft. Except that they don't hold the pick. They traded it months ago, traded it to Los Angeles for Sidney Spencer. LA doesn't hold it either; they've already sent it elsewhere to bring home Noelle Quinn. It's 2009 and the #1 pick for 2010 is in the hands of the Minnesota Lynx.

(It's 2010. Minnesota doesn't hold the pick anymore either. They're bringing home Lindsay Whalen with it, sending the #1 and Renee Montgomery to Connecticut for the favorite daughter of the Gopher State.)

It's 2009. The Sacramento Monarchs fold, and we still miss them. The Liberty take Nicole Powell first overall in the dispersal draft. The Lynx take Rebekkah Brunson with the next pick.

It's 2009. This team is going to kill me one of these days. I just hope I die happy.

It's 2024. this team is trying to kill me but what else is new

It's 2010. I'm combing stray newspapers on the train, looking for anything more than an AP blurb or a half-hearted mini-article about my team.

It's 2024. Kayla Thornton is screaming in joy on the front cover of the New York Post, the city's most right-wing newspaper.

It's 2011. The WNBA is pushed aside to make way for "offseason" renovations at MSG.

It's 2024. The NBA moves aside to make room for the WNBA.

It's 2012. It's 2013. We're slogging to New Jersey, through New Jersey. It's a blur, a dull march on a treadmill to nowhere.

It's 2024. We're on a train in Brooklyn, a fast-moving blur. It's New York or nowhere.

It's 2014. We're trading with Connecticut for a former MVP, proud daughter of Caribbean heritage, who says she wants to be in New York. We gamble three years of first-round picks on her. It doesn't work.

It's 2024. We've traded with Connecticut for a former MVP, proud daughter of the Caribbean, who says she wants to be in New York. We've sent away three players for her. It works.

It's 2015. We're choking away a 15-point lead to the Fever. We can't put them away that night. We don't put them away. One of the best seasons in Liberty history ends in the semifinals.

It's 2024. We're choking away an 18-point lead to the Lynx. We can't put them away that night. But we put them away. It ends with a trophy.

It's 2016. One of the best seasons in Liberty history comes down to a winner-take-all game at home. Phoenix springs the second-round upset and it's over.

It's 2017. One of the best seasons in Liberty history comes down to a winner-take all game at home. Washington springs the second-round upset and it's over.

It's 2024. One of the best seasons in Liberty history comes down to a winner-take-all game at home. Minnesota digs deep. New York digs deeper and it's over.

It's 2018. We're playing in Westchester County Center. There isn't a good seat in the house. The concession stands are occasionally on fire. The lighting is dim and the acoustics are terrible. The train back to the city runs once an hour and leaves five minutes before the end of a typical regulation game. Bee-Line buses back to the subway are cheaper, but make getting home a multi-hour ordeal.

It's 2024. We're playing at the Barclays Center. The seats are good. The concession stands are fire. The lights are bright and the sounds are loud. Half the trains in the city connect to bring everyone here, to bring everyone home.

It's 2019. No one wants to be in the shitty church basement. The fans don't or can't; the seats are half empty. The players don't; they're going through the motions on the floor.

It's 2024. There isn't an empty seat in the house. This is the place everyone wants to be.

It's 2020. We're all scared and alone and confused and worried. And also Sabrina Ionescu is lying on the court holding her ankle, in case Liberty fans needed a more concrete metaphor for the loss of hope.

It's 2024. Sabrina's lying on the court holding her face. In the stands, we're together and relieved and overjoyed.

It's 2021. The arenas are refilling, slowly, carefully. We're still collectively feeling our way through a changed world.

It's 2024. The arenas are full. We're collectively feeling our way through a changed world.

It's 2023. Role players step up for the best team in the league, and the Las Vegas Aces celebrate a title on the floor of Barclays Center.

It's 2024. Role players step up for the best team in the league, and the New York Liberty celebrate a title on the floor of Barclays Center.

It's 2024. I am a relieved 40-year-old woman, and I love this team.

It's 2024. I am an overjoyed 12-year-old girl, and I love this team.

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Thursday, October 24, 2024

October 20th, 2024: Minnesota at New York (Game 5, WNBA Finals)

we back in this bitch and back on our shit  

A little late, but you didn't think I wasn't going to write about this, did you? So I don't forget. So we don't forget.

Of course there were Lynx fans in front of us. Perfectly nice people despite me passive-aggressiving all over them, but I sit in a section close to the Liberty bench and I keep expecting other people to consider sitting near their own bench when they travel.

When the shots were short and flat early... when the passing was sloppy and Napheesa Collier was playing like a woman possessed...it was such a strong feeling of "oh, no, here it goes again, should have known, should have known again". Game 4 against Las Vegas all over again. 2016 against Phoenix all over again. Nikki Teasley all over again. The inverse of the Charlotte miracle all over again. New York ain't for everybody, and in that first half it looked like it wasn't for the Liberty. 

But I forgot the one thing that's been consistent through this entire heavyweight title fight of a series, the one common thread. It wasn't about the first punch in any of these games. Every single time, it was about the finishing kick. And at the end of the first half, Leonie said, "Nein." And Jonquel said, "NOT AGAIN." And Breanna was there for the rebounds. 

Sabrina's shot in Game 3 is the most important shot in Liberty history now. Ruocco's statement, hyperbolic at the time, has been vindicated. But... mirrors. The most iconic shot in Liberty history came from a player who was never a shooter. The most important shot in Liberty history came from a player who is known as a shooter... but the performance that won her, won them, won us, a championship, was a master class in finding the right person at the right time, and in using every inch of her frame horizontally and vertically on defense. Sabrina played probably the most T-Spoon game of her life. 

Courtney Williams will probably hate me for quoting her in this place, at this time. But it's as true for the 2024 Liberty as it was the 2019 Sun: role players did that. The golden children who were supposed to lead us to the promised land couldn't hit water falling out of a boat- so they became role players in their way. Everyone forgot about Jonquel (including, sometimes, Sandy), but she powered through exactly when we needed her. But the biggest moments? The key pivots? Role players did that. Spare parts in multi-team trades did that. The second post off the bench did that.

 *sigh* yes, we will get this out of the way, because I strive to be honest where and when I can: the "REF YOU SUCK!" chant while Alanna Smith was lying on the floor once again trying to remember how her spine worked was completely unnecessary. That was a foul on Jonquel. Thank you to whoever in the crowd pivoted it to "WE ALL WE GOT/WE ALL WE NEED". I cannot speak on the final call in regulation, because I didn't have a good angle to see it. But refs in this league have always lagged well behind the skill, speed, and strength of the players. They've never been consistent and they've always been weak to pressure from the last person to yell at them. If you're in a position where you think you lost because of a call at the end of the game, there were other problems that were within your control to fix and you should have fixed them. 

Here is what I remember of the end of game: how clutch it was that Kayla had the ball when Minnesota had the foul to give, because she was in a position where either Carleton was going to foul out or Collier was going to foul out. And it was Collier who took the foul. I don't think Minnesota believed it. I don't think she believed it. And then the turnover. Leonie getting the steal. Time ticking away. Oh my God. They're not fouling. They're not- Buzzer. OH MY GOD. OH MY GOD! Incoherent screaming. 27 years. 27 fucking years. Hugging, high-fiving. Calling my mom down in Carolina to try and get a video chat going so she could join in. Finding the friends we've known for years, for decades. Hugging. High-fiving. Kissing. Calling my mom again and just screaming over and over again, "WE DID IT! WE DID IT!" at the top of my lungs, all lessons about projection and diaphragm usage forgotten. 

The players starting the MVP chant for Jonquel, who deserves the world. How stunned she looked to get that award, because the blocking sure looked like stats be damned, they were gonna feed the narrative and give it to Breanna. One hand on MVP trophy, one hand on championship trophy. 

The fans starting the "SA-BA-LLY" chant for Nyara. Oh my God. This is a city about the hustle and the grind. You put in the work and we don't care who you are, you belong. And Nyara should have gotten game ball. Really, Nyara should get whatever she wants and if she has to buy a drink in this town ever again, what are we even doing here? For her to come back from the injuries that she has, for her to be put on the spot and rise to this occasion... it's just so much. Everything is so much right now. She rose to the occasion, and her name thundered through the Barclays Center at the end of the night. Nobody else really got that. Even the MVP chants for Jonquel weren't as loud or as strong. 

27 years. There's going to be a post about that, too, about all we were then and all we are now. It's a series of jump cuts, crossing 27 years, 28 seasons, however you want to do the math. There's a lot of heartbreak in those years. There are a lot of good memories, a lot of bad memories. We've fallen down the mountain more than anyone else, and it's good, it's so good to finally be on the mountaintop. It's glorious. It's surreal. It's everything. 

 In conclusion I love everyone in this bar.

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