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2015 WNBA Finals

2015 WNBA Finals
Team Coach Wins
Minnesota Lynx Cheryl Reeve 3
Indiana Fever Stephanie White 2
Dates October 4–October 14
MVP United States Sylvia Fowles (Minnesota)
Television ABC, ESPN, ESPN2 (HD)
Announcers Ryan Ruocco, Rebecca Lobo
Referees
Game 1: Sue Blauch, Eric Brewton, Kurt Walker
Game 2: Michael Price, Maj Forsberg, Lamont Simpson
Game 3: Denise Brooks, Roy Gulbeyan, Tom Mauer
Game 4: Sue Blauch, Eric Brewton, Maj Forsberg
Game 5: Michael Price, Denise Brooks, Roy Gulbeyan
Eastern Finals Indiana Fever defeated New York, 2–1
Western Finals Minnesota Lynx defeated Phoenix, 2–0
WNBA Finals
Game 1: Sue Blauch, Eric Brewton, Kurt Walker
Game 2: Michael Price, Maj Forsberg, Lamont Simpson
Game 3: Denise Brooks, Roy Gulbeyan, Tom Mauer
Game 4: Sue Blauch, Eric Brewton, Maj Forsberg
Game 5: Michael Price, Denise Brooks, Roy Gulbeyan

The 2015 WNBA Finals was the championship series for the 2015 WNBA season of the Women's National Basketball Association (WNBA). On August 26, vegasinsider.com projected that the Minnesota Lynx has the highest odds to win the series (11/10).

The WNBA Finals were under a 2–2–1 rotation. The Lynx held home-court advantage as they had a better regular season record (22–12) than the Fever (20–14).

The Indiana Fever finished 20–14, good for third place in the Eastern Conference. The Fever lost their first playoff game against the Chicago Sky, but rallied to win two straight elimination games, setting up a conference final against the New York Liberty. Once again, Indiana lost the first game of the series, but rallied to win two straight to reach the finals for the third time in franchise history, which gave Stephanie White the first rookie head coach to lead her team to the WNBA Finals.

The Minnesota Lynx finished with the best record in the Western Conference for the fourth time in five year, finishing with a 22–12 record. With the mid-season addition of Sylvia Fowles from the Chicago Sky, the Lynx eliminated the Los Angeles Sparks in three games. The Lynx then swept the Phoenix Mercury in the Western Conference Finals after a controversial foul called on Mercury guard Noelle Quinn on Maya Moore with 1.5 seconds left in the fourth quarter in Game 2, which gave them a chance to win their third WNBA title in five years.

The Minnesota Lynx won the season series 2–0:


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