LAS VEGAS — In the Las Vegas Aces’ run through the WNBA playoffs, there has been one consistent concern for Becky Hammon: how her team handles success.
They followed up a dominant victory in the postseason opener — their 17th in a row — by blowing a double-digit lead to the Seattle Storm in the second game. Then, they eked out a win in Game 3 of the first round to keep their season alive, but came out flat against the Indiana Fever in the first game of the semifinals. And with a chance to close out the shorthanded Fever in four games, Las Vegas’ defense wasn’t up to par in its first closeout opportunity, requiring a decisive Game 5 and overtime to move on to the finals.
Heading into Game 2 of the WNBA Finals, Hammon said: “I want me not be able to tell whether we’re coming in off a win or a loss. The mindset is the mindset, and that’s what I want to see from us. I want to see a mature approach, a veteran approach, a veteran mindset of some success that we had in the first game carry over emotionally and mentally into the second game.”
The Aces had a chance to string together three consecutive wins for the first time this postseason on Sunday, a chance to finally demonstrate the consistency that turned their season around and got them to the No. 2 seed in the standings.
Championship teams sustain success. And Las Vegas is now two wins away from its third title in four years after a dominant, 91-78, Game 2 victory on Sunday. The Aces now hold a 2-0 lead against the Phoenix Mercury heading into Game 3 on Wednesday.
ARE YOU NOT ENTERTAINED 😤
Jackie Young scored 21 PTS in the 3Q….. 21 PTS! This marks the most ever in an individual quarter of a WNBA Finals game! She has 30 PTS for the game.
PHX-LVA | ABC | WNBA Finals | @YouTubeTV pic.twitter.com/c5PqIBP3lB
— WNBA (@WNBA) October 5, 2025
Part of the reason Las Vegas was able to build off of a win so comfortably was because there was a lot to improve upon from their first performance of the series. The Mercury defended the Aces’ best players well, which allowed for the supporting cast to pop. That meant A’ja Wilson and Jackie Young had another level to hit.
Wilson led off for Las Vegas, scoring a career-best 20 points in the first half. The Aces were intentional in getting the MVP the ball in the middle of the court and spacing the floor around her to make it harder for Phoenix to send help. In a 1-on-1 matchup, Natasha Mack and Alyssa Thomas offered little resistance to Wilson shooting over them. Wilson finished with 28 points and 14 rebounds; it is the third time she has finished a finals game with at least 25 points and 10 boards, breaking a tie with Breanna Stewart for the most in WNBA history.
After Wilson helped Las Vegas build a nine-point halftime lead, Young took the baton in the third quarter. She started her scoring with a 3-pointer from the wing on a second-chance possession that she created by rebounding her own miss at the rim. Then came a take to the basket, a jumper off a screen from Wilson, some crafty footwork in the paint and a continuous offensive onslaught for the rest of the period. She finished the frame with 21 points, a WNBA record, and became the first player in franchise history to score 30 points in a finals game, all with 10 minutes still to play.
The duo combined for 60 points, nearly doubling their output of 31 in the first game. Hammon refers to Wilson as the best player in the world and Young as the league’s best two-way guard, and they looked the part.
“I’m just so proud of Jackie,” Wilson said. “She’s a perfectionist. And when you see someone that works so hard every single day, and then you get to see the hard work paying off, it’s a beautiful thing to witness.”
Las Vegas was able to find success offensively because its defense created stops and enabled the team to play in the open court. The Aces took about a half to lock in defensively in Game 1. That switch flipped earlier Sunday, as Las Vegas held the Mercury to 10 second-quarter points, taking a nine-point halftime lead that it would not relinquish for the remainder of the game.
“We worked our way into it,” Hammon said postgame. “The second quarter defensively kind of clicked for us. To me, once we’re able to flip that switch defensively, we become a different team.”
The two-time champs are always confident in their ability to generate offense, whether it’s the depth pieces producing, like Dana Evans and Jewell Loyd did in Game 1, or the stars putting together historic performances. They may not be individually consistent on that end, but they are collectively. That unit has topped 80 points in 13 of the last 15 games.
It’s the defense that has wavered during this postseason, but the Aces have been good enough for five of eight quarters.
“We’re getting stops on defense, we’re able to play out of our defense, get going in transition at the pace that we want to play at,” Young said.
To keep that standard through the next game, the Aces can’t focus on the end prize of a championship. They have to win the margins and master the details that have gotten them to this point.
“We just have to play the game that’s in front of us,” Wilson said. “This is another opportunity for us to play basketball the right way, and going into Phoenix, that’s the same mindset.”
(Photo of Las Vegas’ Jackie Young, left, battling Phoenix’s Satou Sabally on Sunday: Ian Maule / Getty Images)