Culture
WNBA playoff matchups set as Atlanta Dream claim final spot: How does postseason format work?
NEW YORK — It took until the final day of the 2024 WNBA season for the playoff bracket to be settled, but the Atlanta Dream claimed the eighth and final postseason spot on Thursday night with a 78-67 over the New York Liberty.
Atlanta entered the evening needing a win to clinch its second consecutive playoff berth. While New York had clinched the No. 1 overall seed on Tuesday night, the Liberty still played a regular rotation throughout the first half and began the third quarter with four of their usual starters still in action.
Dream center Tina Charles finished the victory with 10 points and 10 rebounds, setting new WNBA career records for rebounds and double-doubles in the game. She passed Sylvia Fowles’ 4,006 rebound mark just over three minutes in the first quarter and Fowles’ 193 double-double mark midway through the third quarter. Charles, the No. 1 pick in the 2010 WNBA Draft by the Connecticut Sun, is the lone player in WNBA history ever to record more than 4,000 rebounds and 7,000 career points.
Dream wing Rhyne Howard and forward Naz Hillmon led Atlanta with 13 points apiece.
Having won and made consecutive postseason appearances for the first time since 2013-14, the Dream won’t have to go far. They packed for a week-long trip to New York and will face the Liberty again Sunday to open the postseason.
“This year is special. This has definitely been the toughest year for us with everything that has gone on,” coach Tanisha Wright said. “I’m really proud of our athletes for continuing to fight and never giving in because I think it’s easy to give in after the season that we’ve had… They fought all year no matter our circumstances, no matter who was available to us and so that, that’s a special group over there.”
Thursday night had the potential for some madness. The Washington Mystics could have clinched a playoff spot with a win, a loss by the Dream and a win by the Chicago Sky. The Sky, meanwhile, would have claimed the final playoff spot had they won and both Atlanta and Washington lost. Atlanta would have clinched a berth even with a loss, because of Chicago’s defeat.
The Mystics, playing front of a new all-time WNBA record 20,711 fans, defeated the Indiana Fever on Thursday, 92-91. Indiana had already clinched the No. 6 seed and played each of its five starters 20 minutes or fewer. The Connecticut Sun defeated the Chicago Sky, 87-54, to both eliminate Chicago from postseason contention and clinch the No. 3 seed. As a result of Connecticut’s victory, the Las Vegas Aces became locked into the No. 4 seed.
Playoff matchups
Here are the postseason matchups and the start times for Sunday.
Liberty (1) vs. Dream (8) — 1 p.m. ET
Lynx (2) vs. Mercury (7) — 5 p.m. ET
Sun (3) vs. Fever (6) – 3 p.m. ET
Aces (4) vs. Storm (5) 10 p.m. ET
What is the WNBA’s playoff format?
Following the 2021 season, the WNBA altered its playoff format to get rid of single-elimination games and byes to the semifinals for the top two seeds. In the new format, the top eight teams from the regular season, regardless of conference, qualify for the postseason with all eight taking part in a best-of-three series for the first round. The first two games of the series will be held on the homecourt of the higher seed, with the lower seed then hosting a Game 3, if necessary. No lower seed has ever upset the higher seed in the new series format.
The winners of the respective first-round series will advance in the bracket to the semifinals, where the remaining four teams will participate in a best-of-five series. The semifinals will begin on Sept. 29.
The respective winners of those series will then advance to the WNBA Finals, which will also be a best-of-five series. The WNBA Finals will begin on Oct. 10, with a potential Game 5 set for Oct. 20.
What history could be made in the postseason?
Here is some of what is at stake in the playoffs:
- The Aces are looking to become the first franchise to win three consecutive championships since the Houston Comets, who won four consecutive titles from 1997-2000.
- The Liberty are eyeing their first championship in franchise history, having lost in the WNBA Finals five times, including last season.
- The Sun enter the playoffs with the longest active streak, dating back to 2017. Forward DeWanna Bonner has played 80 postseason games, and needs just three appearances to set a new record for career postseason appearances. She is set to pass both Rebekkah Brunson (81) and Lindsay Whalen (82).
- Mercury guard Diana Taurasi is already the WNBA’s leading scorer in the postseason (1,455 points), but she can add to her resume in what could be her final postseason.
- Liberty guard Courtney Vandersloot will set a new record for career assists in the postseason with three more assists. Sue Bird currently holds the record (362).
- Fever guard Caitlin Clark will be making her postseason debut after leading Indiana back to the playoffs for the first time since 2016.
- The Lynx and Storm head into the playoffs tied for the most championships among active WNBA franchises with four each.
Required reading
(Photo: Erica Denhoff / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)
Culture
Try This Quiz on Oscar-Winning Adaptations of Popular Books
Welcome to Great Adaptations, the Book Review’s regular multiple-choice quiz about works that have gone on to find new life as movies, television shows, theatrical productions — or even books. With the Academy Award nominations announced last week, this week’s challenge celebrates past Oscar-winning films that were based on books. Just tap or click your answers to the five questions below. And scroll down after you finish the last question for links to the books and their filmed versions.
Culture
What Kind of Lover Are You? This William Blake Poem Might Have the Answer.
Not every poem about love is a love poem. This one, from William Blake’s “Songs of Innocence and of Experience,” first published in 1794, is more analytical than romantic. Instead of roses and violets, it offers us dirt and rocks.
William Blake (1757-1827), obscure in his own time and a hero to later generations of poets and spiritual seekers, made his living as an engraver and illustrator. He conceived and executed many of his poetic projects as works of visual as well as literary art, etching his verses and images onto copper plates and printing them in vivid color — a style designed to blur the boundary between word and picture.
“The Clod & the Pebble” is set in a rustic tableau populated by wild and domesticated animals. In the print, we can’t quite see the main characters, who are presumably somewhere beneath the hooves and the ripples. But the cows and sheep, the frogs and the duck, are nonetheless connected to the poem’s meaning.
The two sections of “Songs of Innocence and of Experience” are meant to illustrate “the contrary states of the human soul” — the purity and wonder associated with early childhood and the harder knowledge that inevitably follows.
“The Clod & the Pebble” recapitulates this fall from sweetness into disillusionment, and the plate suggests it in contrasting ways. The wild animals down below symbolize a natural condition of innocence, while the livestock above live in confinement, bound to another’s use. At the same time, though, the cows and sheep are peaceful ruminants, while the frogs and the duck are predators.
In the poem, the Clod is an avatar of innocence. As it happens, this is a recurring character in the Blakean poetic universe. In “The Book of Thel,” a fantastical meditation composed a few years before the publication of “Songs of Innocence and of Experience,” the Clod appears as a maternal figure selflessly nursing a baby worm:
The Clod of Clay heard the Worms voice, & raisd her pitying head;
She bow’d over the weeping infant, and her life exhal’d
In milky fondness
“We live not for ourselves,” she tells the poem’s heroine, a young girl named Thel. But in Blake’s system self-sacrifice can never be the last word. There is no innocence without the fall into experience, and no experience without the memory of innocence. Giving gives way to wanting.
Question 1/6
Love seeketh not Itself to please,
Nor for itself hath any care;
Tap a word above to fill in the highlighted blank.
Want to learn this poem by heart? We’ll help.
Get to know the poem better by filling in the missing words below.
First, the Clod’s perspective.
Culture
Try This Quiz on Myths and Stories That Inspired Recent Books
Welcome to Lit Trivia, the Book Review’s regular quiz about books, authors and literary culture. This week’s challenge tests your memory of 21st-century books that were inspired by ancient myths, legends and folk tales. In the five multiple-choice questions below, tap or click on the answer you think is correct. After the last question, you’ll find links to the books if you’d like to do further reading.
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