
Chelsea Gray Wins MVP Award By Leading Las Vegas Aces to First WNBA Championship
Chelsea Gray Wins MVP Award By Leading Las Vegas Aces to First WNBA Championship
There is a new team that can call themselves WNBA champions!
According to the WNBA, the Las Vegas Aces, winners of the 2022 WNBA championship is the first franchise from Las Vegas to actually win a professional sports title from that city.
đ CHAMPIONS đ
For the first time in franchise history, the @LVAces are #WNBA Champs, defeating the Connecticut Sun 3-1 in the #WNBAFinals presented by @YouTubeTV to take the title âźď¸#MoreThan pic.twitter.com/KjErTsQTIM
â WNBA (@WNBA) September 18, 2022
The Aces took the title away from their home and beat the Connecticut Sun in their arena on Sunday. The MVP (Most Valuable Player) Award was given to Chelsea Gray who put up 20 points to make sure the Las Vegas Aces won their first WNBA title. The Game 4 final score was 78-71.
The moment the @LVAces won it all, the beautiful sound of the buzzer and a even prettier view of our new #WNBAChamps đ pic.twitter.com/ittc0Oe8gu
â WNBA (@WNBA) September 18, 2022
Another record that was made in this year’s final belongs to the head coach of the Aces, Becky Hammon. She has become the first person in WNBA history to have made it to the finals as a player (2008 with San Antonio) and as a coach (2022 with Las Vegas). As she was just hired less than a year ago in December 2021, she also became the first head coach to win the championship in her first year in that position.
âJust really happy for the girls overall. They stayed focused. This has been the goal since training camp,â said Hammon. âLuckily, I got a group of really resilient players, and you know, I said it out there, but probably the biggest thing Iâm proud of is just how they have come together over the course of the past five, six months to really become a team. And you saw different people step up at different moments tonight, and thatâs what makes us difficult to beat.â
The team did a great job, but the MVP was on fire for the whole playoff season. In the 10 games leading up to the WNBA title, Gray averaged 21.7 points while dishing out 7 assists per game. She also shot 61.1% from the field and 54.4% from the 3-point range.
No WNBA player has been more effective on the floor than Gray. She shot a league-high playoff-effective field goal percentage of 71.9% in this yearâs playoffs. She is the first player to shoot above 70% after the regular season. This is for players who shot a minimum of 100 shots in a single postseason.
Gray does speak about the disappointment of not winning it all last year.
âIt hurt so much because it was the little things that made us lose,â said Gray. âIt wasnât like the big picture. We had a squad. We were ready for the moment. Itâs just the little things that hurt us â defensive possession, turnovers. I replayed the turnover that I had in the fourth quarter that changed the game. I could have got a shot up.
âThat replays in my head when I come back in those moments, and now Iâll just have a different replay in my head. It was a tough moment, but it built character, and it built for next year. It was setting something up for the following year.â
Chelsea Gray Wins MVP Award By Leading Las Vegas Aces to First WNBA Championship
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