{"id":204977,"date":"2025-10-11T10:59:09","date_gmt":"2025-10-11T10:59:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/ca\/204977\/"},"modified":"2025-10-11T10:59:09","modified_gmt":"2025-10-11T10:59:09","slug":"the-aces-long-and-bumpy-road-to-reclaim-their-spot-atop-the-wnba","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/ca\/204977\/","title":{"rendered":"The Aces\u2019 Long and Bumpy Road to Reclaim Their Spot Atop the WNBA"},"content":{"rendered":"<p id=\"inline-text-0\" class=\"!mt-[30px] first-letter:float-left first-letter:text-[48px] first-letter:leading-[48px] md:first-letter:text-[54px] md:first-letter:leading-[54px] first-letter:pr-1.5 mt-[18px] md:mt-0 mb-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"4q\">PHOENIX \u2014 The Aces developed a taste for the circuitous this season. They frequently spoke of winding roads and rollercoasters. There was a sense that nothing went as expected for them in 2025.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-1\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"4t\">In the end, however, the path straightened out.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-2\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"4w\">The Aces did not trail for a moment of their <a href=\"https:\/\/www.si.com\/what-we-learned-as-the-aces-closed-out-the-mercury-in-game-4-of-the-wnba-finals\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">97\u201386 win in Game 4<\/a> of the WNBA Finals to sweep the Mercury. Las Vegas\u2019s third championship in four years was the first in which it went undefeated during the Finals. Reigning MVP A\u2019ja Wilson was named Finals MVP: <a href=\"https:\/\/www.si.com\/wnba\/aja-wilson-is-certifiably-the-goat-wnba-title\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">The best player in the league<\/a> was at her best when she had to be. It was the most straightforward way possible to win a title.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/images2.minutemediacdn.com\/image\/upload\/c_crop,x_0,y_0,w_0,h_0\/c_fill,w_16,ar_16:9,f_auto,q_auto,g_auto\/images\/voltaxMediaLibrary\/mmsport\/si\/01k79azk3v01j7knsqdk.jpg\" alt=\"ACED IT: A'ja Wilson celebrates on a Sports Illustrated Digital Cover\" title=\"ACED IT: A'ja Wilson celebrates on a Sports Illustrated Digital Cover\" width=\"0\" class=\"undefined w-full w-full blur-[5px]\" q:id=\"55\"\/><\/p>\n<p>Adam Hagy\/NBAE\/Getty Images<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-4\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"59\">Which felt diametrically opposed to everything that got them to that point. Vegas was not in a playoff spot when the calendar flipped to August. A roster built to contend was instead struggling to stay at .500. And then everything turned. The Aces followed one of the most dramatic losses in league history with one of the most dramatic winning streaks. They climbed back into the playoff picture and then all the way up the standings. But they got reacquainted with struggle in a hurry: Vegas was pushed to an elimination game in the first round of the postseason and then again in the semifinals. It came within one possession of being knocked out twice.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-5\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"5c\">And then came that straight last bit of road en route to a championship, no detours, potholes or wasted time once in the Finals.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-6\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"5f\">It challenged their coach more than any of her previous championships had. It required their best player to take more ownership of their group. And it required every other member of the team to put in the work to go along with them.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-7\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"5i\">\u201cWe went the distance with this team,\u201d Aces coach Becky Hammon said. \u201cWe\u2019ve been joking around saying this team likes to go the long way around. Just because you\u2019re taking the long way around doesn\u2019t mean it\u2019s the wrong way around.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-9\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"5n\">At the beginning of this season, Hammon gave each of her players a potted plant. The coach has a healthy love of metaphor: There is perhaps no one in the league who is more likely to pull out a prop or use a complicated example to get her point across. (\u201cBecky always has something, man,\u201d said Aces forward Kierstan Bell.) She felt that she had a strong one to start the year. After winning back-to-back championships in 2022 and \u201923, the team had gotten complacent and occasionally sloppy in \u201924, failing to make it back to the Finals. Hammon wanted to start this season with something to communicate the power of consistent, daily work, similar to caring for a plant.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-10\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"5q\">She had no idea how useful the metaphor would prove. It just worked a bit differently than she had expected.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/images2.minutemediacdn.com\/image\/upload\/c_crop,x_0,y_0,w_0,h_0\/c_fill,w_16,ar_16:9,f_auto,q_auto,g_auto\/images\/voltaxMediaLibrary\/mmsport\/si\/01k79b5e6ast5dtre7n7.jpg\" alt=\"Becky Hammon, A'ja Wilson, Chelsea Gray, Jackie Young\" title=\"Becky Hammon, A'ja Wilson, Chelsea Gray, Jackie Young\" width=\"0\" class=\"undefined w-full w-full blur-[5px]\" q:id=\"5z\"\/><\/p>\n<p>Becky Hammon (left) knew at the start of the season that she wanted her players to take more responsibility.  | Christian Petersen\/Getty Images<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-12\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"63\">The Aces dropped their first game of the season in the sort of performance that would come to feel agonizingly familiar over the next few months. They came out strong before finding themselves down at halftime by double digits, which spurred a furious attempt at a comeback, only to completely fall apart down the stretch after a win had been within reach. That would happen over and over in the first half of the season. They never looked uniformly terrible. But they were so uneven as to feel inscrutable. Vegas beat good teams and lost to bad ones and then scrambled that combination. The Aces made it to the All-Star break without ever winning three games in a row.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-13\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"66\">\u201cIt felt like our losses were self-inflicted. It felt like we had control over it, and we just did not show up,\u201d Wilson said. \u201cAnd when you know you could be better, that\u2019s the worst type of losing.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-14\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"69\">They could not pinpoint any specific cause of their problems. No especially difficult injuries, no single consistent weakness, no obvious solution worth targeting in practice. It was everything and nothing. This core had been together for years: It was Wilson\u2019s fifth season of starting alongside the guard duo of Jackie Young and Chelsea Gray. But nothing seemed to work the way it once did. Hammon found herself saying the same thing over and over when people texted or called to check in with her: This team is going to be the death of me. She found herself toggling between needing to give them a kick in the ass and needing to give them a hug.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-15\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"6c\">Hammon kept coming back to the plants. But she tweaked the messaging. Perhaps the more appropriate metaphor was about roots taking hold beneath the surface, about faith in growth that might not always be obvious, about pushing up through heavy soil.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-16\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"6f\">\u201cShe had this whole thing about either being planted or being buried,\u201d said Aces center Kiah Stokes. \u201cLike: This is either our time to show if we\u2019re buried, and that\u2019s it, or if we were planted to grow into something else.\u201d\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-17\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"6i\">The difference between being planted and buried can be a matter of perspective. In retrospect, there is a clear, coherent narrative for this season that has its turning point on Aug. 2, when the Aces lost to the Lynx by a score of 111\u201358. The defeat was just a few buckets shy of the worst loss in the history of the WNBA. That led to a furious motivational team group text from Wilson, starting with, If you weren&#8217;t embarrassed from yesterday, then don&#8217;t come into this gym. And it was followed by a historic victory streak. Vegas won 16 straight to end the regular season and zoomed up to take the No. 2 seed. Looking back, that seems as clean and clear as flipping a switch, one easy movement to slide from off to on. But that shift was not so obvious in real time.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-18\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"6l\">It felt instead more like the growth of a plant. The day-to-day change was not always obvious. It was happening all the same, however, and soon it was impossible to ignore.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/images2.minutemediacdn.com\/image\/upload\/c_crop,x_0,y_0,w_0,h_0\/c_fill,w_16,ar_16:9,f_auto,q_auto,g_auto\/images\/voltaxMediaLibrary\/mmsport\/si\/01k79brm58g545tstzxj.jpg\" alt=\"Jewell Loyd, Chelsea Gray and A'ja Wilson\" title=\"Jewell Loyd, Chelsea Gray and A'ja Wilson\" width=\"0\" class=\"undefined w-full w-full blur-[5px]\" q:id=\"6u\"\/><\/p>\n<p>Much like when she started coming off the bench midseason, Jewell Loyd (left) found her spark again in the Finals after quiet performances in the first two rounds.  | Ian Maule\/Getty Images<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-20\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"6y\">The loss to the Lynx was the worst moment of the season for the Aces, statistically, but it was not their only demoralizing loss. (\u201cObviously, everyone points to Minnesota\u2026 I could point to three or four games,\u201d Hammon said, noting particularly bitter defeats and sour film sessions at the hands of Indiana and Seattle.) At that point, they had already begun to make some of the changes they would need to start turning it around. A few games earlier, Team USA Olympic guard Jewell Loyd volunteered to start coming off the bench to provide a spark, a role that she would stay in for the rest of the season. And Hammon had already begun considering how this group would start taking on more ownership of its performance.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-21\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"71\">The coach landed on something that surprised all of them. Hammon was going to have the Aces do their own scouting reports going forward. The players would take on all of the work there and share it with one another without the coaches in the room. Hammon and her staff would then come in and share their perspective to align on a game plan.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-22\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"74\">She had never handed quite so much responsibility to a team before. But she had never had a group that she thought would benefit from it as much. Hammon believed Vegas had all the raw tools and talent it needed to win. She just needed the players to start buying in and holding each other accountable on the floor.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-23\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"77\">Most of the players had never taken on full scouting responsibilities. (Returning players had certainly never done it on the Aces.) It was a stretch for some of them; Hammon did not take on all (or even most) of their suggestions. But the practice changed the culture of the group. It required more time watching film and breaking down strategy together. It offered a platform for every last member of the roster to contribute. And Hammon asking them to do it felt like a sign of her belief in them.\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-24\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"7a\">\u201cBecky trusts us, and I think she knows that it helps when we do those things together,\u201d said Aces guard Dana Evans, who came to the Aces in the offseason through a trade with the Sky. \u201cThen we can pick each other\u2019s mind. We can say, Why do you feel we should do this? And then it just kind of helps with the dialogue and game-planning, and I feel like with chemistry, as well. It helped that you heard people\u2019s voices that you don\u2019t always hear.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-25\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"7d\">Those players-only scout meetings soon became a place for more than just breaking down film.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-26\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"7g\">\u201cSometimes you kind of get used to just the coaches doing all the work, trying to motivate people, giving stories, the speeches, everything,\u201d said Loyd, also new to the team this season. \u201cIt hits different when it comes from your team. It\u2019s personal &#8230; People are getting more vulnerable in the locker room, opening up, and I think that\u2019s when we all just opened up to each other a little more. We kind of just used that as a bonding mechanism, and it allowed us to just really buy into everyone\u2019s story, with a lot of stuff to hold ourselves accountable on and be more vocal and take some ownership.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/images2.minutemediacdn.com\/image\/upload\/c_crop,x_0,y_0,w_0,h_0\/c_fill,w_16,ar_16:9,f_auto,q_auto,g_auto\/images\/voltaxMediaLibrary\/mmsport\/si\/01k79be1z6m1yhgzrspm.jpg\" alt=\"Chelsea Gray addresses the Aces during a timeout\" title=\"Chelsea Gray addresses the Aces during a timeout\" width=\"0\" class=\"undefined w-full w-full blur-[5px]\" q:id=\"7p\"\/><\/p>\n<p>Often referred to as the WNBA\u2019s \u201cPoint Gawd,\u201d Chelsea Gray is a natural leader on a player-led team.  | David Becker\/NBAE\/Getty Images<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-28\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"7t\">There were some natural leaders in those sessions. Gray, their point guard, has always been a perceptive play-caller: She has a dry-erase board all her own to use during huddles. (\u201cYou have a brain like that, you just let it go,\u201d Hammon said. \u201cYou don\u2019t try to harness it. You just let her be her creative self and let her eyes do the work.\u201d) There were generally key defensive insights from veteran lockdown specialist Stokes. But there was no one who engaged here like Wilson.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-29\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"7w\">The 6&#8242; 4&#8243; center has spent the last few years steadily building her case as the best player in the WNBA, expanding her skillset in terms of breadth and depth alike, with a remarkable knack for making complicated actions look easy. She took on an increasingly big leadership role in each of Vegas\u2019s previous two championship runs: Wilson had to grow into the idea that sometimes taking control of a situation by herself is the best way to help out her teammates. But she leaned into that concept more than ever in 2025.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-30\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"7z\">Wilson used to think of team film sessions as a place for her to watch and listen. That had to change this season. She began coming in with her tablet and keyboard. First, it was simply for notetaking, and soon, it was to more easily share the notes that she had already taken watching film alone before the group session.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-31\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"82\">\u201cShe became even more of a student of the game,\u201d said Aces assistant coach Charlene Thomas-Swinson. \u201cShe stepped out of her comfort zone to be able to assist. \u2026 She had to have the patience to teach from a player perspective, and it meant something to have those two lenses or voices, one from Becky, another from her.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-32\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"85\">Wilson\u2019s tablet became something of a team joke. When she plunked her bag down on the table at a postgame news conference, Hammon asked if her computer was in there. \u201cA\u2019ja\u2019s just always on her little laptop, typing away, giving us ideas,\u201d Aces rookie Aaliyah Nye said when asked to describe her WNBA film experience. They all know the stickers on the case by heart: The big one in the middle reads I Might Cry But I\u2019m Gonna Be Okay. \u201cShe writes everything down now,\u201d said Stokes, who has been Wilson\u2019s teammate for five seasons. \u201cI definitely had not seen that side of her.\u201d But they only razzed her about it because it had worked so well.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-33\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"88\">She had watched film more carefully and worked through more ideas and then shared them with her teammates more openly. It made Wilson a natural choice to head up those player scout meetings: \u201cA\u2019ja\u2019s done a great job of leading those every single time,\u201d said Gray, who realized that even as their floor general, this was ground she needed to cede to her teammate. It made sense with the way her game has developed. Wilson had the highest usage rate in the WNBA this season. Everything the Aces do runs through her. As her talents have expanded, she has become more versatile and more mobile, far more than simply an inside threat. She has come to break the game down more cohesively and more coherently by necessity. And she now had to share that vision with her teammates.\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-34\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8b\">\u201cSeeing your leader be that dialed in, that focused, it just shows that everybody needs to be that dialed in,\u201d said Aces forward NaLyssa Smith. \u201cBecause if she\u2019s doing it, then it\u2019s like, we need to do that 10 times more.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-35\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8e\">There was a plant analogy here, too. \u201cSometimes a plant doesn\u2019t grow to specification,\u201d Thomas-Swinson said. \u201cIt needs water, sunlight, but there are definitely intangibles.\u201d Diligent, regular, by-the-book care does not always result in expected growth. A gardener might be surprised by what ends up working. Sometimes a coach lets the players do the scout and watches a season turn around.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/images2.minutemediacdn.com\/image\/upload\/c_crop,x_0,y_0,w_0,h_0\/c_fill,w_16,ar_16:9,f_auto,q_auto,g_auto\/images\/voltaxMediaLibrary\/mmsport\/si\/01k79byc7fhy1q6x04gq.jpg\" alt=\"Aces players celebrate winning the 2025 WNBA title\" title=\"Aces players celebrate winning the 2025 WNBA title\" width=\"0\" class=\"undefined w-full w-full blur-[5px]\" q:id=\"8n\"\/><\/p>\n<p>\u201cSeeing your leader be that dialed in, that focused, it just shows that everybody needs to be that dialed in,\u201d said Aces forward NaLyssa Smith (left). | Adam Hagy\/NBAE via Getty Images<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-37\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8r\">Hammon knows that some of her metaphors and examples can seem cheesy or excessive from the outside. She understands that her team of professionals did not embark on a historic midseason transformation because of some plants. But she also realizes that cheesy, potentially excessive things can sometimes work, and a coach never knows for certain just where a connection might take root.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-38\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8u\">\u201cShe loves doing those types of things\u2014examples, analogies, stories,\u201d said Aces forward Megan Gustafson. \u201cBut she really helps relating it to us. If she\u2019s trying to teach anything on the floor, she\u2019s able to off-the-court relate it to something &#8230; And each of us has a relationship with Becky. I think that\u2019s what\u2019s very important.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-39\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8x\">That was in the plants, too. Hammon put a personalized message on each pot. She reminded Bell to look for the joy in every day. She told Evans to keep her spirits high. She told Nye to embrace all kinds of growth. The players saw those messages whenever they watered their plants. They set group bets on how long they would keep them alive: Most of them had never tried something like this before. (Plant care is not exactly compatible with the life of a professional athlete.) A few did, in fact, die; Bell was teased as the first one to see hers bite the dust. But more of them lived. Gray\u2019s became part of her daily family life: Her toddler son, Lennox, says hello to the plant each morning as he helps water it. Gustafson named hers \u201cMavid\u201d by mashing up her own name with that of her fianc\u00e9. And the trio of Wilson, Loyd and Young got to crow at a championship press conference about how they had all won their bets and kept theirs alive, too.\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-40\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"90\">\u201cI think we definitely bloomed,\u201d Stokes said.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-42\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"95\">All of that led to a WNBA Finals that was a de facto showcase for Wilson. She averaged 28.5 points and 11.8 rebounds, <a href=\"https:\/\/www.si.com\/wnba\/aja-wilson-is-unstoppable-game-3-wnba-finals\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">plus one stone-cold game-winne<\/a>r, a postseason record for blocks and steals, and lockdown defense on Mercury first-team All-WNBA forward Alyssa Thomas. It left no question the four-time league MVP would get her second Finals MVP.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-43\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"98\">Yet it was striking how much of a cohesive group performance this was beyond her. The Aces got major bench contributions from Evans and Loyd. Gray had two performances with 10 assists. Young dropped 32 points in a <a href=\"http:\/\/www.si.com\/wnba\/aces-rely-on-familiar-faces-game-2-win-wnba-finals\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">transcendent Game 2.<\/a> Stokes was asked to close out multiple games for defensive stops despite not logging any minutes otherwise. Every role was covered.\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/images2.minutemediacdn.com\/image\/upload\/c_crop,x_0,y_0,w_0,h_0\/c_fill,w_16,ar_16:9,f_auto,q_auto,g_auto\/images\/voltaxMediaLibrary\/mmsport\/si\/01k79bjz5e7jm7zm35mv.jpg\" alt=\"Aces coach Becky Hammon hugs A'ja Wilson\" title=\"Aces coach Becky Hammon hugs A'ja Wilson\" width=\"0\" class=\"undefined w-full w-full blur-[5px]\" q:id=\"9h\"\/><\/p>\n<p>Hammon relied heavily on her star player to refocus the Aces whenever the team hit a road bump this season.  | Adam Hagy\/NBAE\/Getty Images<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-45\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"9l\">It was all the more impressive for how many pivots they made during the series. The Aces were nearly always playing with a lead, but they never got too comfortable, and Hammon kept ahead of that with constant adjustments. They never came out with the same defense twice: Their standard man switched to a zone at halftime of Game 1, which they moved away from in Game 2, only to experiment more with a box-and-one in Game 3 and a triangle-and-two in Game 4. In less capable hands, this easily could have looked too cute by half, or like tinkering for tinkering\u2019s sake. For them it felt seamless.\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-46\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"9o\">\u201cWe went through the mud for this one,\u201d Wilson said. \u201cBut like Coach always said, we weren\u2019t necessarily buried, we were planted. And sometimes we had to let the soil get moisture, and then we had to grow.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-47\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"9r\">This title was not like the Aces\u2019 past championships. It started much rougher and finished a bit smoother. The group agreed that made it sweeter.\u00a0\u00a0\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-48\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"9u\">\u201cIt\u2019s probably been my toughest season as a coach,\u201d Hammon said. \u201cNot with anything to do with X\u2019s and O\u2019s. It was trying to help a group figure out who they are together and have the understanding that they\u2019re better together. \u2026 It just took some time. You know, I think everybody wanted it to happen like that, and believe me, I did too, but it just doesn\u2019t work that way.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-49\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"9x\">Hammon did not reach for any metaphor here, speaking about the importance of time and patience and small, daily efforts piling up to result in growth. But she did not have to. They all knew. Her team is now ready to fly back home to Vegas for a parade and championship rings and, of course, to water some plants.<\/p>\n<p>More WNBA Playoffs on Sports Illustrated<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"PHOENIX \u2014 The Aces developed a taste for the circuitous this season. They frequently spoke of winding roads&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":204978,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[629],"tags":[49,48,82,630],"class_list":{"0":"post-204977","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-wnba","8":"tag-ca","9":"tag-canada","10":"tag-sports","11":"tag-wnba"},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/204977","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=204977"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/204977\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/204978"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=204977"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=204977"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.newsbeep.com\/ca\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=204977"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}