MINNESOTA LYNX


The 'Minnesota Lynx' are a Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA) team based in Minneapolis, Minnesota and play their home games at the Target Center. They are currently coached by Don Zierden, who took the helm in December 2006.
The team is named after the lynx, a wild variety of cat. The Lynx are the sister team to the Minnesota Timberwolves and are owned by Glen Taylor.
'Uniforms':

★ Their home uniforms are white with blue, green, and silver trim. "Lynx" is written on the jerseys in green. The road uniforms are blue with silver, white and green trim and "Minnesota" written in silver.

Contents
Franchise History
Season-by-Season Records
Players of note
Hall of Famers
Retired numbers
Not to be forgotten
Current players
Coaches and others
External links

Franchise History


In April 1998, the WNBA announced they would add two expansion teams (Minnesota and the Orlando Miracle), for the 1999 season. The Lynx started their inaugural season in 1999 with 12,000 fans in attendance to watch the first regular-season game, against the Detroit Shock at Target Center. The Lynx defeated Detroit 68-51 in the franchise's first game. They finished their first season 15-17 overall.
The Lynx' first head coach Brian Agler was released during the 2002 season after compiling a 47-67 in 3+ seasons. Heidi VanDerveer became the interim head coach for the remainder of the season.
In 2003, the Lynx hired Suzie McConnell Serio as head coach. She led the team to finished with a franchise-best 18-16 record and advanced to the WNBA Playoffs for the first time. They matched both of these feats in the 2004 season.
The 2005 season was one of transition for the franchise. Leading scorer Katie Smith was dealt to Detroit in July and the team stumbled down the stretch, missing the playoffs for the first time in three years. The poor finish did pay off however, as the team won the draft lottery and selected All American guard Seimone Augustus of the LSU Tigers with the #1 overall pick in the 2006 WNBA Draft.
The Lynx began the 2006 season as the youngest team in the WNBA. On May 31 the team set the WNBA single game scoring record, routing the Los Angeles Sparks 114-71. That victory however, was a rare bright spot in a frustrating season. On July 23, with her team floundering to an 8-15 record, head coach Suzie McConnell Serio resigned. She was replaced by assistant Carolyn Jenkins, who piloted the squad to a 2-9 finish. The team's 24 losses set a franchise record.
Following the season, Seimone Augustus was named the 2006 WNBA Rookie of the Year. The 22-year-old was the second player in team history to win the award (Betty Lennox, 2000).
On December 13, 2006 the Lynx named veteran NBA assistant Don Zierden their fifth head coach. His staff will include former Lynx player Teresa Edwards and Jenkins.
In the 2007 WNBA Draft on April 4, the Lynx traded center Tangela Smith, who they acquired in the dispersal draft from the Charlotte Sting in December 2006, to the Phoenix Mercury for guard Lindsey Harding, who had been selected first overall earlier that day.
The Lynx began the 2007 season 0-7, lost 10 straight in July and failed to get into the playoff race. They finished tying a league worst 10-24 record.

Season-by-Season Records


|-
|colspan="6" align=center bgcolor="navy" | 'Minnesota Lynx
|-
|1999 || 15 || 17 || .469 || ||
|-
|2000 || 15 || 17 || .469 || ||
|-
|2001 || 12 || 20 || .375 || ||
|-
|2002 || 10 || 22 || .313 || ||
|-
|2003 || 18 || 16 || .529 || Lost First Round || Los Angeles 2, Minnesota 1
|-
|2004 || 18 || 16 || .529 || Lost First Round || Seattle 2, Minnesota 0
|-
|2005 || 14 || 20 || .412 || ||
|-
|2006 || 10 || 24 || .294 || ||
|-
|2007 || 10 || 24 || .294 || ||
|-
|'Totals' || '122' || '176' || '.409' || ||
|-
|'Playoffs' || '1' || '4' || '.200' || ||
Stats updated August 20, 2007

Players of note


Target Center, home of the Lynx

Hall of Famers

none
Retired numbers

none
Not to be forgotten


Adia Barnes

Jacqueline Batteast

Kiesha Brown

Erin Buescher, now with the San Antonio Silver Stars

Janell Burse, now with the Seattle Storm

Grace Daley

Helen Darling, now with the San Antonio Silver Stars

Keitha Dickerson, now the Head Coach at Mountain View College

Teresa Edwards, now an assistant coach with the Lynx

Tonya Edwards

Trisha Fallon

Kristin Folkl

Kristi Harrower

Chandi Jones

Susan King Borchardt

Amanda Lassiter, now with the Chicago Sky

Betty Lennox, now with the Seattle Storm

Tynesha Lewis

Andrea Lloyd-Curry, now a TV analyst for the Lynx

Stacey Lovelace-Tolbert, now with the Washington Mystics

Maylana Martin, now an Assistant Coach at her ''alma mater'', UCLA

Tamara Moore, now with the Houston Comets

Kate Paye, now an Assistant Coach at ''alma mater'', Stanford University

Angie Potthoff, now an Assistant Coach at University of Notre Dame

Lynn Pride

Brandy Reed

Sheri Sam, now with the Indiana Fever

Georgia Schweitzer, now attending Duke University School of Medicine

Katie Smith, now with the Detroit Shock

Shanele Stires, now an Assistant Coach at University of San Francisco

Sonja Tate

Stacey Thomas

Shona Thorburn

Michele Van Gorp

Adrian Williams, now with the Sacramento Monarchs
Current players

Coaches and others


'Head Coaches':

Brian Agler (1999-2002)

Heidi VanDerveer (2002)

Suzie McConnell Serio (2003-2006)

Carolyn Jenkins (2006)

Don Zierden (2007-present)

External links



Minnesota Lynx official website

Downtown Journal's Stephen Litel

Sue Short's "Lynx Lane" fanpage

This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves