OSUBasketballJunkie
Never Forget 31-0
Congratulations to Katie Smith on winning the WNBA championship.
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Published Sunday, September 10, 2006
SHOCK 80, MONARCHS 75
Smith's 17 Leads Detroit to Title
By JON KRAWCZYNSKI
The Associated Press
DETROIT -- Katie Smith has won Olympic gold, an American Basketball League title and scored 5,000 points in the pros.
Entering this season, though, her Hall of Fame resume lacked one crucial element: a WNBA championship.
Check.
Smith scored 17 points and had two crucial baskets in the fourth quarter to seal the Detroit Shock's decisive Game 5 80-75 victory over the defending champion Sacramento Monarchs. It was Detroit's second WNBA title in the past four years.
Deanna Nolan was the finals MVP after a 24-point performance Saturday, but it was Smith who was getting all the attention after the game.
"This one is special," said Smith, who scored in double figures in four of the five games of the series. "When you are younger, you think you'll get chance after chance after chance, but now I know that's not how it works."
Smith hurled the ball high in the air as time expired Saturday, and the party was on at Joe Louis Arena and its announced crowd of more than 19,000 -the second-highest total in the history of the finals.
"Katie's a great, great player and she did just what we expected her to do," Shock coach Bill Laimbeer said. "She could have easily been the MVP, too."
Shock owner William Davidson, who previously has won the NBA title as Pistons owner and the Stanley Cup as owner of the Tampa Bay Lightning, was presented with the WNBA trophy by league president Donna Orender.
Davidson said he told Laimbeer at the beginning of the season that one of his responsibilities as an owner was accepting trophies. He jokingly added that he was glad Laimbeer got the message.
The trophy presentation was reminiscent of the glory days of the Pistons with Laimbeer and assistant coach Rick Mahorn standing on the podium as champions.
It was at The Palace of Auburn Hills, however, that those Pistons and these Shock typically have played. But Saturday's game was held at the home of the Detroit Red Wings because of a scheduling conflict.
A Mariah Carey concert at The Palace forced the Shock and Monarchs to play 30 miles south in Detroit.
But the fans were plenty loud and helped Detroit continue the trend of the home team winning every deciding game in the 10year history of the WNBA finals.
After the Monarchs decisively won Game 3 at home, the feeling was that they would be able to take the series in Game 4, also at Arco Arena, where they rarely lose.
But Detroit roared back with a 20-point win Wednesday. Saturday's game was the only one of the series not decided by double digits.
Sacramento, for a half at least, looked like it would win two championships in a row. It held the lead for the entire second quarter and took a 44-36 halftime advantage thanks to Kara Lawson's running jumper with 1 second remaining.
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