WNBA team season
The 2011 WNBA season is the 4th season for the Atlanta Dream of the Women's National Basketball Association. The Dream finished the regular season with a 20-14 record, good for third-best in the Eastern Conference. The Dream then won their second consecutive Eastern Conference Championship. The Dream made their way to the WNBA Finals before being swept by the Minnesota Lynx.
Transactions
WNBA draft
Trades and Roster Changes
Date
|
Transaction
|
January 7, 2011
|
Extended Qualifying Offers to Alison Bales and Yelena Leuchanka
|
March 23, 2011
|
Signed Sandora Irvin to a Training Camp Contract[1]
|
March 24, 2011
|
Signed Ashley Paris to a Training Camp Contract[2]
|
March 31, 2011
|
Signed Alison Bales to a Training Camp Contract[3]
|
April 11, 2011
|
Traded Kelly Miller, the draft rights to Ta'Shia Phillips, and a 1st Round Pick in the 2012 WNBA draft to the Washington Mystics in exchange for Lindsey Harding and a 2nd Round Pick in 2012.[4]
|
Traded the draft rights to Rachel Jarry and a 2nd Round Pick in the 2012 WNBA draft to the Minnesota Lynx in exchange for the draft rights to Felicia Chester
|
April 21, 2011
|
Signed Kelsey Bolte to a Rookie Scale Contract
|
April 28, 2011
|
Signed Shannon McCallum to a Training Camp Contract
|
April 29, 2011
|
Signed Felicia Chester to a Rookie Scale Contract
|
May 21, 2011
|
Waived Ashley Paris and Kelsey Bolte
|
May 31, 2011
|
Exercised 4th-Year Team Option on Angel McCoughtry
|
Declined Team Option on Shalee Lehning
|
Waived Shannon McCallum
|
June 1, 2011
|
Waived Felicia Chester[5]
|
June 5, 2011
|
Waived Brittainey Raven
|
Signed Kelly Mazzante[6]
|
June 16, 2011
|
Temporarily Suspend Sancho Lyttle due to Overseas Commitments
|
June 18, 2011
|
Signed Courtney Paris[7]
|
July 3, 2011
|
Activated Sancho Lyttle from her Temporary Suspension
|
Waived Kelly Mazzante[8]
|
September 8, 2011
|
Signed Sancho Lyttle to a Contract Extension[9]
|
Roster
2011 Atlanta Dream Roster
|
Players |
Coaches
|
Pos. |
# |
Nat. |
Name |
Ht. |
Wt. |
From
|
C
|
33
|
|
Bales, Alison
|
6 ft 7 in (2.01 m)
|
218 lb (99 kg)
|
04-04-1985
|
Duke
|
G/F
|
8
|
|
Castro Marques, Izi
|
6 ft 0 in (1.83 m)
|
140 lb (64 kg)
|
03-13-1982
|
Brazil
|
F/C
|
14
|
|
de Souza, Erika
|
6 ft 5 in (1.96 m)
|
190 lb (86 kg)
|
03-03-1982
|
Brazil
|
G
|
10
|
|
Harding, Lindsey
|
5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
|
139 lb (63 kg)
|
06-12-1984
|
Duke
|
F
|
24
|
|
Irvin, Sandora
|
6 ft 3 in (1.91 m)
|
185 lb (84 kg)
|
02-23-1982
|
TCU
|
G
|
5
|
|
Lehning, Shalee
|
5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)
|
140 lb (64 kg)
|
10-27-1986
|
Kansas State
|
F
|
20
|
|
Lyttle, Sancho
|
6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
|
175 lb (79 kg)
|
09-20-1983
|
Houston
|
F
|
35
|
|
McCoughtry, Angel
|
6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
|
160 lb (73 kg)
|
09-10-1986
|
Louisville
|
G
|
9
|
|
Miller, Coco
|
5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)
|
140 lb (64 kg)
|
09-06-1978
|
Georgia
|
C
|
3
|
|
Paris, Courtney
|
6 ft 4 in (1.93 m)
|
250 lb (113 kg)
|
09-21-1987
|
Oklahoma
|
G/F
|
22
|
|
Price, Armintie
|
5 ft 9 in (1.75 m)
|
133 lb (60 kg)
|
04-03-1985
|
Mississippi
|
|
- Head coach
- Marynell Meadors (Middle Tennessee)
- Assistant coaches
- Sue Panek (Maryland)
Carol Ross (Mississippi)
- Player development
- Fred Williams (Boise State)
- Athletic trainer
- Kim Mosely (Southern Miss)
- Legend
- (C) Team captain
- (FA) Free agent
- (IN) Inactive
- (S) Suspended
- Injured
|
Depth
Schedule
Preseason
2011 Preseason Schedule
|
Total: 1–0 (Home: 0–0; Road: 1–0) |
Regular season
2011 Regular Season Total: 20–14 (Home: 13–4; Road: 4–13)
|
June: 3–7 (Home: 2–5; Road: 1–2)
Game |
Date |
Time (ET) |
Opponent |
TV |
Score |
High points |
High rebounds |
High assists |
Location/Attendance |
Record
|
1 |
June 5 |
3:00pm |
New York |
SSO |
88–94 (OT) |
Castro Marques (19) |
Lyttle (11) |
Harding (9) |
Philips Arena 8,038 |
0–1
|
2 |
June 9 |
7:00pm |
Washington |
ESPN2 |
90–98 (OT) |
de Souza (20) |
de Souza (15) |
Castro Marques (5) |
Philips Arena 5,020 |
0–2
|
3 |
June 11 |
8:00pm |
@ San Antonio |
|
74–86 |
McCoughtry (19) |
de Souza (14) |
Harding (4) |
AT&T Center 9,140 |
0–3
|
4 |
June 14 |
7:00pm |
@ New York |
|
79–58 |
McCoughtry (18) |
Bales Irvin (7) |
Lehning (6) |
Prudential Center 5,725 |
1–3
|
5 |
June 17 |
8:00pm |
@ Minnesota |
|
85–96 |
McCoughtry (27) |
de Souza (11) |
Castro Marques (4) |
Target Center 7,556 |
1–4
|
6 |
June 19 |
3:00pm |
Minnesota |
SSO |
64–77 |
Harding (14) |
de Souza (12) |
Harding Miller (3) |
Philips Arena 7,274 |
1–5
|
7 |
June 21 |
12:00pm |
Chicago |
SSO |
71–68 |
McCoughtry (14) |
McCoughtry Paris (8) |
Harding (6) |
Philips Arena 6,154 |
2–5
|
8 |
June 24 |
7:30pm |
Phoenix |
FS-S FS-A |
83–92 |
McCoughtry (24) |
Paris (8) |
Harding (4) |
Philips Arena 5,492 |
2–6
|
9 |
June 26 |
3:00pm |
San Antonio |
NBATV SSO |
86–92 |
Miller (19) |
Paris (11) |
Price (5) |
Philips Arena 5,718 |
2–7
|
10 |
June 30 |
7:30pm |
New York |
SSO |
87–81 |
de Souza (27) |
de Souza (15) |
McCoughtry Miller (4) |
Philips Arena 4,423 |
3–7
|
|
July: 5–3 (Home: 3–0; Road: 2–3) |
August: 8–3 (Home: 3–1; Road: 5–2)
Game |
Date |
Time (ET) |
Opponent |
TV |
Score |
High points |
High rebounds |
High assists |
Location/Attendance |
Record
|
19 |
August 2 |
7:30pm |
New York |
FS-S |
75–85 |
McCoughtry (24) |
McCoughtry Price (6) |
Harding (9) |
Philips Arena 4,573 |
8–11
|
20 |
August 7 |
3:00pm |
Seattle |
NBATV SSO |
70–53 |
McCoughtry (17) |
de Souza Lyttle (7) |
Harding (7) |
Philips Arena 7,337 |
9–11
|
21 |
August 9 |
7:00pm |
@ Washington |
CSN-MA |
72–70 |
McCoughtry (19) |
de Souza (12) |
McCoughtry (5) |
Verizon Center 9,536 |
10–11
|
22 |
August 11 |
10:00pm |
@ Phoenix |
|
95–109 |
McCoughtry (25) |
de Souza (7) |
Bales (4) |
US Airways Center 7,940 |
10–12
|
23 |
August 13 |
10:00pm |
@ Seattle |
NBATV KONG |
92–63 |
Castro Marques McCoughtry (17) |
McCoughtry (6) |
Price (4) |
KeyArena 9,686 |
11–12
|
24 |
August 16 |
10:30pm |
@ Los Angeles |
NBATV SSO PRIME |
84–79 |
McCoughtry (23) |
de Souza (13) |
Price (8) |
STAPLES Center 7,522 |
12–12
|
25 |
August 19 |
7:30pm |
Connecticut |
NBATV SSO |
94–88 (OT) |
McCoughtry (26) |
McCoughtry (12) |
Harding (5) |
Philips Arena 7,225 |
13–12
|
26 |
August 21 |
5:00pm |
@ Connecticut |
|
87–96 |
McCoughtry (22) |
de Souza (10) |
Harding (9) |
Mohegan Sun Arena 6,636 |
13–13
|
27 |
August 23 |
8:00pm |
@ Chicago |
CN100 |
83–80 |
McCoughtry (22) |
McCoughtry (7) |
Harding (9) |
Allstate Arena 2,876 |
14–13
|
28 |
August 27 |
7:00pm |
@ Indiana |
NBATV SSO FS-I |
86–80 |
McCoughtry (20) |
Lyttle (9) |
Castro Marques (3) |
Conseco Fieldhouse 9,242 |
15–13
|
29 |
August 30 |
7:30pm |
Indiana |
SSO |
92–90 |
McCoughtry (28) |
Lyttle (11) |
Harding (6) |
Philips Arena 6,467 |
16–13
|
|
September: 4–17 (Home: 3–0; Road: 1–1) |
All games are viewable on WNBA LiveAccess or ESPN3.com
|
Playoffs
2011 Playoffs Schedule
|
Eastern Conference Semifinals vs. Connecticut (Won Series 2-0) |
Eastern Conference Finals vs. Indiana (Won Series 2-1) |
WNBA Finals vs. Minnesota (Lost Series 0-3) |
Standings
Playoffs
- Bold – Series winner
- Italics – Team with home-court advantage
Statistics
Regular Season
Playoffs
Awards and honors
References
- ^ "Atlanta Dream Signs Forward Sandora Irvin". oursportscentral.com. Our Sports Central. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
- ^ "Former Sooner Ashley Paris Returns to WNBA". news9.com. New 9. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
- ^ "Atlanta Dream Re-Signs Center Alison Bales". oursportscentral.com. Our Sports Central. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
- ^ Orton, Kathy. "Washington Mystics trade Lindsey Harding, acquire Ta'Shia Phillips and Kelly Miller". washingtonpost.com. Washington Post. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
- ^ Roberson, Doug. "Dream waive Chester". ajc.com. AJC. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
- ^ "DREAM SIGNS VETERAN GUARD KELLY MAZZANTE". wnba.com. WNBA. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
- ^ "Atlanta Dream Signs Center Courtney Paris". oursportscentral.com. Our Sports Central. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
- ^ Willis, Kris. "Atlanta Dream Forward Sancho Lyttle Returns To Team, Kelly Mazzante Waived". atlanta.sbnation.com. SB Nation. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
- ^ Willis, Kris. "The Atlanta Dream Re-Sign Sancho Lyttle To Multi-Year Deal". peachtreehoops.com. SB Nation. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
- ^ "McCoughtry, Augustus earn WNBA Player of the Week honors". wltx.com. WLTX. Retrieved July 6, 2022.
- ^ "McCoughtry, Hammon earn WNBA Player of the Week honors". 9news.com. 9 News. Retrieved July 6, 2022.
- ^ "Atlanta's Angel McCoughtry and Los Angeles' Candace Parker Named WNBA Eastern and Western Conference Players of the Week". wnba.com. WNBA. Retrieved July 6, 2022.
- ^ "Atlanta's McCoughtry and Seattle's Smith Named Players of the Week". oursportscentral.com. Our Sports Central. Retrieved July 6, 2022.
- ^ "Atlanta Dream's Angel McCoughtry and Minnesota Lynx' Seimone Augustus Named Players of the Month for July". wnba.com. WNBA. Retrieved July 6, 2022.
- ^ Willis, Kris. "WNBA All-Star Game 2011: Angel McCoughtry Named As Starter". atlanta.sbnation.com. SB Nation. Retrieved July 6, 2022.
- ^ a b c d "2011 WNBA Season Awards". wnba.com. WNBA. Retrieved July 6, 2022.
External links
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Franchise | |
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Arenas | |
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Head coaches | |
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Administration |
- Owner: Ron Terwilliger
- Kathy Betty
- Dream Too LLC
- Larry Gottesdiener, Suzanne Abair, and Renee Montgomery
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General managers | |
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All-Stars | |
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Seasons | |
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Playoff appearances | |
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Conference titles | |
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WNBA titles | |
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Rivals | |
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Media | |
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