In a time long, long ago, before cell phones had the WNBA app, quick links to Team NBS Media, or even the monotonous snake game, humans learned pattern recognition differently.
By going to a place called….gasp…outside!
It may seem odd to bring up this quaint reminisce after Chicago’s mildly entertaining 58-79 defeat to reimagined Minnesota on Friday night. Who has time to learn when the world’s best athletes are hooping in Wintrust Arena’s blinding lights and deafening sound?
Yet, while fans can be excused, no, expected to enjoy their weekend with popcorn and selfies, their team faces an early reckoning. After a 3-1 start raised anticipation for Chicago, an 0-4 homestand proved to be a deflating end to May.
What went awry on Friday night, and how must Chicago reorient its effort to ensure a playoff return?
Lynx Refuse To Play With Meal
Chicago stole a victory in Minnesota in the foes’ first meeting this season. Last Saturday, the Lynx ordered revenge’s dish lukewarm in a rugged Sky defeat.
However, Minnesota needed less effort to deliver an early summer sunset to Chicago on Friday. Minnesota’s 31-16 third-quarter advantage decisively removed suspense from the contest. True, several first-half hustle plays helped the Lynx build a lead during Saturday’s setback.
Of further concern for Sky fans is how Minnesota further exploited this advantage on Friday. True, the Lynx outshot the Sky by a 39.4% to 28.6% margin while attempting one more goal than Chicago. However, there is more to this tale than the usual variance in a make-or-miss sport.
Sky Express Switches Fuel
The most vital apparatus that makes any Wintrust basketball game possible also provides a clue on how the Sky can reverse their May malaise.
A skylight? Skye’s cooling fan? No: the maddeningly necessary internal combustion engine fueling Midwest vehicles.
The brilliance of this contraption lies in how easily motorists can create the small explosions needed to propel vehicles through McCormick Place. If Science! can help humanity’s road trips, it certainly will assist Chicago coach Tyler Marsh’s determined, unrelenting focus on launching his Sky back to the top eight.
Who will provide this needed explosion? Players who are already on the roster but are unable to participate in contests.
Swish Savant Gabriela Vasquez and franchise goat Courtney Vandersloot could not compete in the disappointing rout. Yet, one could still see them huddle with their active teammates on the court while Minnesota proudly departed.
It seems that, although on a long homestand, Chicago still wore down without a full roster. Candidly, teams in a rebuilding cycle need an occasional crisis. A moment where, with no room to inbound, a point guard steels her passion and ignites a team’s soul.
Only expansive America, with Illinois bracketed by the beautiful Atlantic and Pacific seas, will provide this opportunity. And solely in Chicago, the city with seven rings, can that split-second pattern recognition occur properly.
The snake game has receded to museums—the flip phone, to America’s wastelands. By contrast, in Chicago’s 2026 women’s hoops dawn, the Sky rises from a box score’s infermary to playoff redemption, quickly eclipsing May’s false dusk.