“From the Lynx to the Gophers to high school basketball and then the investment in youth basketball, the support for women’s basketball here is some of the best I’ve ever seen — and I lived in Connecticut,” said the Minnesota assistant Carly Thibault-DuDonis, whose father, Mike Thibault, coached the Connecticut Sun and currently coaches the Washington Mystics, both of the W.N.B.A. “I can see as we recruit that the talent level is so strong here,” she added.
Part of the motivation for younger players, according to their coaches, is that the proximity and success of the Lynx make playing in the W.N.B.A. seem both tangible and desirable. “They talk about it all the time,” Starks said. “‘I want to get to the league. I want to play in the W.N.B.A.’”
The Lynx didn’t always seem aspirational, though. They are one of only five of the league’s 12 franchises that share owners and arenas with N.B.A. teams, but it was still a battle to get practice facilities and promotion that came close to what their male counterparts received. Rebekkah Brunson, who played on the team for nine years and is now an assistant coach, remembers when practice was held in the small court in the basement of the Target Center.
“Winning came first,” Brunson said. “And then eventually, we got to a point where you saw a little bit more of that equal footprint. But it took a while.”