The Atlanta Dream and Indiana Fever played for the second time in three days last night, and the rematch was every bit as competitive as the first. Atlanta won an offensive battle on Tuesday, but Thursday they gave up in a defensive fight. The success they had from game one's strategy didn't carry over Thursday. In game one, they relied heavily on Brittney Griner and Brionna Jones to set the offensive tone. Last night, though, Griner and Jones weren't able to find their groove for a multitude of reasons--the Fever defense did a great job of denying entry passes and sublime post positioning, and Griner herself fouled out for the second straight game.
Without their post players in the gameplan, Atlanta relied heavily on their three point attack in the second half, going 5/16 in the 3rd and 4th quarter and 10/29 overall. Atlanta is now second in the league in three's attempted per contest, just under 32 a game (on 31.6%).
First, here are the three point attempts from the third quarter last night:
No one shot was more emblematic of Atlanta's faults than this Rhyne Howard attempt in the fourth quarter.
The Dream are down one point after a Kelsey Mitchell three pointer. Howard, who up to this point had a strong fourth quarter and game, takes it upon herself to try to splash a haymaker over Clark, a player she's been tasked with guarding for two games and who she's been quite contentious with. Their certainly was a level of ego to this shot--Clark is undoubtedly the most popular player in the league and Howard wanted to make a play over her on a primetime game at home. But Howard herself had strong success getting to the hoop in the fourth quarter. And Clark had 5 fouls as well, which means she would've had to play some level of conservative to not foul out. And even more problematic is the fact that Atlanta is only down one point, which means they didn't need a semi-contested stepback three with 90 seconds left in the game and 14 on the shot clock. Overall, though, Atlanta was inefficient all game in their offensive sets and had to let it rip from three.
The real credit for this should go to Indiana's defensive effort. This was a playoff atmosphere type of game. Familiarity breeds contempt, and Atlanta certainly played with contempt towards Indiana after Tuesday's match. As one user on reddit pointed out, Atlanta was providing a template for the rest of the league on how to guard Clark, and if something wasn't to be done, it was going to be open season on Clark and the Fever. Still, Indiana took a massive step towards contendership with this win. They won a type of game that not many people believed they could win: a defensive slobberknocker that saw both Clark and Aaliyah Boston have nonexistent offensive performances.