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Road to the finals
2> Main article: 2009 WNBA Playoffs Phoenix Mercury Indiana Fever 23-11 (.676) 1st West, 1st overall Regular season 22–12 (.647) 1st East, 2nd overall Defeated the (4) San Antonio Silver Stars, 2-1 Conference Semifinals Defeated the (4) Washington Mystics, 2–0 Defeated the (3) Los Angeles Sparks, 2–1 Conference Finals Defeated the (3) Detroit Shock, 2–1 [edit]

Tags:Phoenix Mercury,Corey Gaines,Indiana Fever,Lin Dunn,Mvp,Diana Taurasi,Espn2,East Finals,Indiana,Detroit,West Finals,Phoenix,2008,2009 Wnba Season,The Season's Playoffs,Eastern Conference,Western Conference,Home Court Advantage,2009 Wnba Playoffs,Regular Season,San Antonio Silver Stars,Washington Mystics,Los Angeles Sparks,Detroit Shock,Fever,Us Airways Center,Conseco Fieldhouse,Indianapolis,In,Fs Indiana,Eastern Daylight Time,Douglas,Hoffman,January,Pondexter,Taylor,Taurasi,Cappie Pondexter,Penny Taylor,Katie Douglas,Sacramento,Tamika Catchings,Dewanna Bonner,Espn2hd,Catchings,Johnson,Briann January,Ebony Hoffman,Temeka Johnson,Tammy Sutton-brown,T. Smith,Willingham,Tangela Smith,Le'coe Willingham,Indianapolis Colts,Peyton Manning,Reggie Wayne,Sutton-brown,Jessica Davenport,Paul Westhead,Finals Mvp,G,Auburn,Pg,Lsu,Sg,Penn State,F/c,Kansas State,Rutgers,Stanford,C,Iowa,Connecticut,F,Australia,G/f,Pf,Loyola Marymount,Bridget Pettis,


Regular season series
3> The Fever and the Mercury split the regular season series: August 8 Recap Indiana Fever 90, Phoenix Mercury 83    US Airways Center, Phoenix, AZ no TV September 2 Recap Phoenix Mercury 106, Indiana Fever 90    Conseco Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, IN FS Indiana [edit]

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Game 1
3> September 29 9:00 p.m. Game 1 Indiana Fever 116, Phoenix Mercury 120 OT  US Airways Center, Phoenix, AZ Attendance: 11,617 Referees: #8 Daryl Humphrey #22 June Corteau #45 Tom Mauer ESPN2HD Scoring by quarter: 31-31, 22-25, 33-24, 19-25, OT: 11-15 Pts: Douglas (30) Rebs: Hoffman (8) Asts: January (7) FG: Hoffman (12-14) Pts: Pondexter, Taylor (23) Rebs: Taurasi (9) Asts: Taurasi (6) FG: Taylor (7-10) Cappie Pondexter missed a game-winning tip-in at the fourth-quarter buzzer then scored seven of her 23 points in overtime Tuesday night to help the Mercury beat the visiting Fever 120-116 in the highest-scoring game in WNBA history. "Well, if you didn't like women's basketball," Phoenix coach Corey Gaines said, "I think you do now." Pondexter, frustrated and in foul trouble in the first half, scored the final five points to close out Game 1 of the best-of-five series. Penny Taylor scored 23 points and newly crowned league MVP Diana Taurasi had 22 for Phoenix. Katie Douglas tied it with a 3-pointer for Indiana with 7.1 seconds left in regulation, then scored eight in overtime for the Fever to reach a career playoff high 30 points. Ebony Hoffman had a career-high 27 on 12 of 14 shooting as the Fever set a franchise scoring record in just the second 100-point game in the club's history. The Mercury and Fever each scored more points than any team previously in league history. The old mark was 115, of course by Phoenix, in an overtime victory over Sacramento on June 13. "It was fun," Taurasi said, "kind of showing a different side of women's basketball - how high a level it is. It's fun to be in the game and I'm sure it was fun to watch." Indiana's Tamika Catchings had just eight points before fouling out with 2:42 left in overtime but harassed Taurasi into a 5 of 17 shooting night. Rookie DeWanna Bonner's two free throws put Phoenix ahead 105-102 with 14.2 seconds left in regulation, then after a timeout, the Fever got the ball to the open Douglas, who sank the 3 that tied it. The lead changed hands six times in overtime. Douglas' 15-footer gave Indiana its final lead at 116-115 with 1:40 left. Pondexter scored on a drive to put the Mercury ahead 117-116 with 1:27 to go, then sank a 16-footer with 20.2 seconds to go to make it 119-116. She finally finished off the Fever by making one of two free throws with 3 seconds to play.[2] Ratings and viewership for Game 1 of the WNBA Finals on ESPN2 were up 39 percent (.43 rating vs. .31 rating for Game 1 of the '08 WNBA Finals) and 59 percent respectively (555,000 viewers vs. 348,000 viewers), making Game 1 the most viewed WNBA game on cable since Game 4 of the '07 WNBA Finals (Shock vs. Mercury) on ESPN2 (669,000).[3] [edit]

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Game 2
3> October 1 9:00 p.m. Game 2 Indiana Fever 93, Phoenix Mercury 84    US Airways Center, Phoenix, AZ Attendance: 16,758 Referees: #4 Sue Blauch #39 Michael Price #42 Roy Gulbeyan ESPN2HD Scoring by quarter: 31-24, 17-21, 29-18, 16-21 Pts: Catchings (19) Rebs: Catchings (9) Asts: Catchings (11) 3PFG: January (3-4) Pts: Taurasi (20) Rebs: Taurasi (7) Asts: Johnson (5) Blks: Taurasi (4) Tamika Catchings fell one rebound shy of the first triple-double in WNBA finals history and the Indiana Fever beat the Phoenix Mercury 93-84 to square the best-of-five series 1-1. After scoring just eight points and fouling out in Game 1, Catchings had 19 points, 11 assists (tying a finals record) and nine rebounds to help the Fever steal home-court advantage in the series with the next two games in Indianapolis. "Series can swing either way really quick," Diana Taurasi said, "and it's swung in their favor pretty quick now." The WNBA defensive player of the year for the third time, Catchings also harassed the league MVP Taurasi into a 7-for-22 shooting night. Taurasi finished with 20 points, going 2 of 10 on 3-pointers. There hasn't been a triple-double in any WNBA game since 2005 and it's happened only once in the playoffs. When Catchings, runner-up to Taurasi in the MVP voting, needed only two rebounds in the final six-plus minutes, it looked as if she would get there. But her ninth didn't come until there was just 28 seconds to play. The cold-shooting Mercury were without supersub Penny Taylor most of the second half. The Aussie, who scored all 14 of her points in the first half, took an elbow from Indiana rookie Briann January and left with a cut lip with 3:33 to play in the third quarter. January, a standout at nearby Arizona State, finished with 16 points on 5-of-7 shooting, 3 of 4 on 3-pointers. The Mercury struggled on offense two nights after a 120-116 overtime victory in Game 1, the highest-scoring contest in WNBA history. Phoenix shot 39.7 percent for the game and was just 5 of 20 in the third quarter, when the Fever built a 17-point lead. Indiana's biggest lead was 77-60 on Ebony Hoffman's 7-footer with 5.6 seconds left in the third. Temeka Johnson's 3-pointer at the buzzer made it 77-63 entering the fourth. A late 14-5 run cut the Fever's lead to 85-80 on Taurasi's layup with 1:23 to play. But Tammy Sutton-Brown responded with a basket inside, then January and Katie Douglas put the game away with free throws.[4] Entering Game 3, ESPN2 was averaging a 0.36 U.S. rating (0.4 cable) and 531,000 viewers for the Fever/Mercury series, up 50% in ratings and 55% in viewers compared to the first two games of 2008's Shock/Silver Stars series (0.24 U.S., 0.3 cable, 331,000 viewers).[5] [edit]

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Game 3
3> October 4 4:00 p.m. Game 3 Phoenix Mercury 85, Indiana Fever 86    Conseco Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, IN Attendance: 18,165 Referees: #7 Clarke Stevens #22 June Corteau #55 Eric Brewton ESPN2HD Scoring by quarter: 17-24, 30-20, 20-26, 18-16 Pts: Pondexter (23) Rebs: T. Smith (10) Asts: Pondexter (8) FG: Willingham (7-11) Pts: Hoffman (18) Rebs: Catchings (12) Asts: Catchings, Douglas (7) Stls: Catchings (4) Ebony Hoffman hit the jumper that gave her team a one-point lead with 57 seconds left, then blocked Tangela Smith's shot with a second remaining to help Indiana defeat Phoenix 86-85 in Game 3 of the finals Sunday. The Fever took a 2-1 lead in the series and can clinch the championship with a win at home Wednesday. Indiana forward Tamika Catchings said Hoffman has been a force since going through a slump at the end of the regular season. "In the playoffs, she's stepped up her game and done such big things, especially in the Phoenix series, playing unbelievable, out of her mind," Catchings said. "That's awesome to see that, especially with the hard work she's put in over the years." Hoffman, who led Indiana with 18 points, did it all with a sprained right shoulder. She left the game with 7:21 left and returned with 3:40 to play. Catchings had 14 points, 12 rebounds and seven assists, Briann January scored 17 points, and Katie Douglas had 15. Cappie Pondexter led Phoenix with 23 points and Le'coe Willingham added 17. Diana Taurasi, the league's MVP, scored 18 points but shot 6-for-16 from the field. Hoffman's long shot from the left corner put Indiana ahead in the final minute. Pondexter rushed downcourt and missed a layup, and Catchings rebounded. Then Indiana missed twice in close, but got the offensive rebound. January dribbled the ball out of bounds with 22 seconds left, though, to give Phoenix a final chance. Pondexter missed a short jumper, and Catchings went for the rebound. She tried to call timeout, but Willingham tied her up and a jump ball was called. Phoenix got the ball into Smith but her shot was blocked by Hoffman. The final margin irked Phoenix because the Fever got a free throw when Taurasi was called for a technical foul that she didn't agree with. Taurasi had just made a tying layup with 5:14 to play, then took the ball and put it on the baseline for Indiana to inbound. As Taurasi turned around, she ran into Douglas, who fell and briefly held her stomach. Taurasi said the officials told her she had thrown an elbow. Taurasi disagreed, saying her head hit Douglas and the play actually messed up her bun. Catchings made the technical free throw to take a 76-75 lead, then January was fouled on the possession Indiana gained after the technical, and she made two free throws. "Lose by a head butt," Taurasi joked.[6] Through Game 3, ESPN2’s telecasts are averaging 476,000 viewers (P2+), an increase of 51 percent when compared to last year’s 316,000 viewers. In addition, the corresponding household impressions are up 50 percent (386,000 vs. 258,000) and the 0.4 rating is an increase of 33 percent over last year’s 0.3 rating.[7] [edit]

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Game 4
3> October 7 7:30 p.m. Game 4 Phoenix Mercury 90, Indiana Fever 77    Conseco Fieldhouse, Indianapolis, IN Attendance: 18,165 Referees: #9 Denise Brooks-Clauser #18 Kurt Walker #39 Michael Price ESPN2HD Scoring by quarter: 33-22, 16-25, 23-18, 18-12 Pts: Pondexter (22) Rebs: Willingham (8) Asts: Pondexter (7) 3PFG: T. Smith (4-6) Pts: Catchings (24) Rebs: Catchings (12) Asts: Catchings, Douglas (4) FG: Catchings (11-17) The high-scoring Phoenix Mercury saved their season with defense. The Indiana Fever led the WNBA finals series 2-1 and had a chance to clinch their first title in front of an active sellout crowd that included local celebrities such as Indianapolis Colts players Peyton Manning and Reggie Wayne. None of that mattered as the Mercury beat the Fever 90-77 on Wednesday night to tie the series and force Game 5 Friday in Phoenix. Indiana shot 2-for 13 in the fourth quarter, stifling any chance it had of overcoming the 72-65 deficit it faced going into the period. The Fever scored 12 points in the quarter, the third-lowest total in a fourth quarter in finals history. Tamika Catchings, who led Indiana with 24 points and 12 rebounds, agreed that her teammates became hesitant. She said this is the wrong time for that. Catchings shot 11-for-17 and Ebony Hoffman scored 17 points on 7-for-10 shooting. The rest of the team shot 11-for-44. Phoenix's offense was in tune as usual. Cappie Pondexter scored 22 points, Penny Taylor added 17 points and Diana Taurasi and Tangela Smith each scored 16. The Mercury shot 10-for-24 from 3-point range. Phoenix felt Indiana controlled the tempo and slowed it down the past two games, but the Mercury felt they regained control on Wednesday. "Our strength all year has been in our confidence in our attack, and I felt we got that back," Taylor said. "We were playing with confidence and attacking every single time down floor, and that's hard to defend for 40 minutes." Phoenix shot 72 percent from the field in the first quarter to jump out to a 33-22 lead. The Fever held the Mercury to 16 points in the second quarter and cut their deficit to 49-47 at the half. Indiana tied the score at 59 on a layup by Catchings with 4:30 left in the third quarter, but Phoenix went on a quick 6-0 run to force a timeout and put the fans, who had been standing in anticipation of a Fever lead, back in their seats. The Mercury extended their lead to 72-65 at the end of the third quarter. Indiana trimmed its deficit to 72-68 on a steal and layup by Catchings, but the Fever went cold and the Mercury pulled away with a 12-2 spurt. A 3-pointer by Taylor made it 84-70 with 2:33 to go. Fever coach Lin Dunn was disappointed to lose at home, but focused on the fact that her team still could win the championship.[8] Through four games, the WNBA Finals averaged 521,000 viewers, up 65% from the 316,000 average for the Detroit Shock's three-game series sweep of the San Antonio Silver Stars, according to Nielsen data. Game 4, in which the Mercury evened matters, drew 670,231 watchers.[9] [edit]

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Game 5
3> October 9 9:00 p.m. Game 5 Indiana Fever 86, Phoenix Mercury 94    US Airways Center, Phoenix, AZ Attendance: 17,313 Referees: #4 Sue Blauch #39 Michael Price #55 Eric Brewton ESPN2HD Scoring by quarter: 23-16, 19-35, 23-19, 21-24 Pts: Sutton-Brown (22) Rebs: Catchings (9) Asts: Douglas (9) Stls: Catchings (5) Pts: Taurasi (26) Rebs: T. Smith (8) Asts: Taylor (5) FG: Pondexter (11-20) The core of the dynamic Phoenix Mercury is a trio as talented as any in the game. Diana Taurasi, Cappie Pondexter and Penny Taylor - who led the team to its 2007 title - did it again in 2009, when the Mercury held off a late rally by the tenacious Indiana Fever for a 94-86 victory in the deciding Game 5. League and finals MVP Taurasi scored 26 points, Pondexter had 24, and Taylor made two crucial free throws with 37.7 seconds left for the Mercury, who won the last two games to take the intense series 3-2. When it was over, the three hugged in elation, and Taylor - the Australian who joined the team Aug. 1 after reconstructive ankle surgery - broke down in tears. Tammy Sutton-Brown scored 22 points, and Jessica Davenport had a career-high 18 for Indiana in its first finals appearance. Tamika Catchings added 16 points and nine rebounds for the Fever. Sutton-Brown pointed to the crucial home loss in Game 4. "We had an opportunity to close it out at home, and we let that one slip away," she said, "but I think we came out and fought hard tonight. Phoenix is a great team. I think it was a great series. It was great for the WNBA." Indiana rallied from 10 down in the second half to tie it at 80 on Sutton-Brown's layup with 4:29 to play, then Tangela Smith made two 3-pointers, her only field goals of the night, to put the Mercury ahead for good. Pondexter's 9-footer made it 88-82 with 2:22 left, but the Fever - who had led the series 2-1 - weren't finished. Davenport's inside basket cut it to 88-84, then Catchings' rebound basket made it 88-86 with 2:07 to play. On the Mercury's next possession, Taylor took the ball and drove the lane into a crowd of defenders. Davenport was called for the foul, and Taylor's two free throws made it 90-86. Two free throws apiece DeWanna Bonner and Taurasi provided the final margin. Taylor added 14 points and Bonner 13 for Phoenix. Katie Douglas had her second straight rough shooting night. The Indiana star was 4 of 14 for 13 points after going 2 of 14 in Game 4. The Mercury made 10 of 17 3s. Phoenix won it with the super-speed style that then-coach Paul Westhead used in 2007 and Corey Gaines adopted when he took over. "When I first started coaching in the WNBA coach Westhead, who is my mentor - who we owe this championship to as much as him being here right now - he told me, `We're going to coach the players as players, not women, ball players'" Gaines said. "And it's funny how they embraced it because they enjoyed being treated that way. Instead of being treated as women basketball players, we treat them as ball players." [10] The five-game WNBA Finals series averaged 548,000 viewers (P2+), up 73 percent vs. last season (316,000). The series averaged 434,000 households, up 68 percent, and delivered a 33 percent ratings increase (0.4) from last year (0.3).[11] [edit]

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Rosters
2> 2009 Phoenix Mercury Finals roster Players Coaches Pos. # Nat. Name Height Weight From 1.5 !G 24 USA ! Bonner, DeWanna 76 !6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 136 lb (62 kg) Auburn 1.0 !PG 2 USA ! Johnson, Temeka 63 !5 ft 3 in (1.6 m) 132 lb (60 kg) LSU 2.0 !SG 33 USA ! Mazzante, Kelly 72 !6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 155 lb (70 kg) Penn State 5.5 !F/C 30 USA ! Ohlde, Nicole 77 !6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 190 lb (86 kg) Kansas State 2.0 !SG 23 USA ! Pondexter, Cappie 69 !5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) 160 lb (73 kg) Rutgers 5.5 !F/C 21 USA ! Smith, Brooke 75 !6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 195 lb (88 kg) Stanford 6.0 !C 50 USA ! Smith, Tangela 76 !6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 160 lb (73 kg) Iowa 1.0 !PG 11 USA ! Swanier, Ketia 67 !5 ft 7 in (1.7 m) 144 lb (65 kg) Connecticut 4.0 !F 13 AUS ! Taylor, Penny 73 !6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 163 lb (74 kg) Australia 2.5 !G/F 3 USA ! Taurasi, Diana 72 !6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 172 lb (78 kg) Connecticut 4.5 !PF 43 USA ! Willingham, Le'Coe 72 !6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 200 lb (91 kg) Auburn Head coach Corey Gaines (Loyola Marymount) Assistant coaches Bridget Pettis (Florida) Julie Hairgrove (Arizona) Athletic trainer Tanara Oiike (California State University) Strength and conditioning coach Tanara Oiike (California State University) Legend (C) Team captain (FA) Free agent (IN) Inactive (S) Suspended Injured 2009 Indiana Fever Finals roster Players Coaches Pos. # Nat. Name Height Weight From 1.0 !PG 41 AUS ! Bevilaqua, Tully 67 !5 ft 7 in (1.7 m) 145 lb (66 kg) Australia 3.0 !SF 24 USA ! Catchings, Tamika 73 !6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 167 lb (76 kg) Tennessee 6.0 !C 50 USA ! Davenport, Jessica 77 !6 ft 5 in (1.96 m) 215 lb (98 kg) Ohio State 2.0 !SG 21 USA ! Dixon, Tamecka 69 !5 ft 9 in (1.75 m) 148 lb (67 kg) Kansas 2.5 !G/F 23 USA ! Douglas, Katie 72 !6 ft 0 in (1.83 m) 165 lb (75 kg) Purdue 4.5 !PF 32 USA ! Hoffman, Ebony 74 !6 ft 2 in (1.88 m) 215 lb (98 kg) Southern California 1.0 !PG 20 USA ! January, Briann 68 !5 ft 8 in (1.73 m) 160 lb (73 kg) Arizona State 5.5 !F/C 31 USA ! Moore, Jessica 75 !6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 175 lb (79 kg) Connecticut 2.0 !SG 14 USA ! Murphy, Eshaya 71 !5 ft 11 in (1.8 m) 164 lb (74 kg) Southern California 6.0 !C 8 CAN ! Sutton-Brown, Tammy 76 !6 ft 4 in (1.93 m) 200 lb (91 kg) Rutgers 3.0 !SF 34 USA ! Wirth, Christina 73 !6 ft 1 in (1.85 m) 185 lb (84 kg) Vanderbilt Head coach Lin Dunn (Tennessee-Martin) Assistant coaches Gary Kloppenburg (UC San Diego) Jim Lewis (West Virginia) Athletic trainer Craig Stull Strength and conditioning coach Brandon Johnson (Purdue) Legend (C) Team captain (FA) Free agent (IN) Inactive (S) Suspended Injured [edit]

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References
2> ^ "Mercury wins WNBA championship". Los Angeles Times. 2009-10-10. Archived from the original on 13 October 2009. http://www.latimes.com/sports/la-sp-newswire10-2009oct10,0,7619356.story. Retrieved 2009-10-12.  ^ Game One Recap ^ Game One Ratings ^ Game Two Recap ^ Game Two Ratings ^ Game Three Recap ^ Game Three Ratings ^ Game Four Recap ^ Game Four Ratings ^ Game Five Recap ^ Game Five Ratings v t e WNBA Finals Playoffs • Finals MVP • Broadcasters • Droughts 1990s 1997 1998 1999 2000s 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010s 2010 2011 v t e 2009 WNBA season by team Draft • Transactions • Schedule • All-Star Game • Playoffs • Finals Eastern Atlanta Dream Chicago Sky Connecticut Sun Detroit Shock Indiana Fever New York Liberty Washington Mystics Western Los Angeles Sparks Minnesota Lynx Phoenix Mercury Sacramento Monarchs San Antonio Silver Stars Seattle Storm ←  2008 • WNBA season • 2010  → v t e Women's National Basketball Association (2012) Eastern Conference Western Conference Atlanta Dream Chicago Sky Connecticut Sun Indiana Fever New York Liberty Washington Mystics Los Angeles Sparks Minnesota Lynx Phoenix Mercury San Antonio Silver Stars Seattle Storm Tulsa Shock Annual events: Draft · All-Star Game · Playoffs · Finals Statistics: Career scoring · Career rebounding · Scoring leaders · Rebounding leaders · Assists leaders Other: All-Decade Team · Arenas · Attendance · Awards · Coaches · Current rosters · Defunct teams · Expansion draft history · Finals broadcasters · LiveAccess · MVP NBA · NBA TV · Players · Rookie of the Year · Seasons · Top 15 Team · WNBA on ESPN v t e NBA on ABC Related programs NBA Countdown · NBA Access with Ahmad Rashad · NBA Inside Stuff · College Basketball on ABC · Olympics on ABC NBA on ESPN Radio · NBA Shootaround · NBA Wednesday · NBA Friday · WNBA on ESPN · Personalities Lore Pacers–Pistons brawl NBA Drafts 2003 · 2004 · 2005 · 2006 · 2007 · 2008 · 2009 · 2010 · 2011 WNBA Finals 2003 · 2004 · 2005 · 2006 · 2007 · 2008 · 2009 · 2010 · 2011 Related articles Ratings Commentators All-Star Game · Eastern Conference Finals · Western Conference Finals · NBA Finals · WNBA Finals Key figures Greg Anthony · Jon Barry · Mike Breen · Hubie Brown · Chris Broussard · Doris Burke · Howard Cosell · Bob Cousy · Jim Durham · Sean Elliott · Len Elmore · Chet Forte · Jim Gordon · Chuck Howard · Keith Jackson · Mark Jackson · Magic Johnson · Steve Jones · Dan Majerle · Al Michaels · Brent Musburger · Brad Nessler · Dan Patrick · Scottie Pippen · Jack Ramsay · Doc Rivers · Bill Russell · Lisa Salters · John Saunders · Chris Schenkel · Stuart Scott · Hannah Storm · Michele Tafoya · Mike Tirico · Tom Tolbert · Jack Twyman · Jeff Van Gundy · Bill Walton · Jerry West · Michael Wilbon ABC Radio announcers Marv Albert · Dave Barnett · Chick Hearn · Rod Hundley · Steve Jones · Fred Manfra · Earl Monroe · Johnny Most · Oscar Robertson · Dick Vitale NBA Finals 1965 · 1966 · 1967 · 1968 · 1969 · 1970 · 1971 · 1972 · 1973 · 2003 · 2004 · 2005 · 2006 · 2007 · 2008 · 2009 · 2010 · 2011 · 2012 · 2013 · 2014 · 2015 · 2016 ABC Radio's coverage 1985 · 1986 · 1987 · 1988 · 1989 · 1990 All-Star Game 1968 · 1969 · 1970 · 1971 · 1972 · 1973 ABC Radio's coverage 1985 · 1986 · 1987 · 1988 · 1989 · 1990 Music "Let's Get It Started" · "ABC" · "Lose My Breath" · "This Is How a Heart Breaks" · "Runnin' Down a Dream" · "Right Now" · "It Ends Tonight" · "Nine Lives" · "Get On Your Boots" · "Rip This Joint" · "All I Want for Christmas Is You" · "Oh Santa!" · "Black Dog" Lore "I think we see Willis coming out!" · Christmas Day Rivalries Bryant–O'Neal · Lakers–Pistons · Celtics–Lakers Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=2009_WNBA_Finals&oldid=481426915" Categories: 2009 WNBA seasonWomen's National Basketball Association Finals Personal tools Log in / create account Namespaces Article Talk Variants Views Read Edit View history Actions Search Navigation Main page Contents Featured content Current events Random article Donate to Wikipedia Interaction Help About Wikipedia Community portal Recent changes Contact Wikipedia Toolbox What links here Related changes Upload file Special pages Permanent link Cite this page Print/export Create a bookDownload as PDFPrintable version This page was last modified on 12 March 2012 at 00:33. 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