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Lynx’s Cheryl Reeve became a rarity while on path to WNBA coaching history

Add The New York Post on Google MINNEAPOLIS — Cheryl Reeve waited a decade before getting a shot to be a WNBA head coach.

She had been a part of WNBA franchises that folded or relocated.

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Those difficult moments tested her conviction as she grinded as an assistant.

“I’m a WNBA person,” she vividly recalls telling those around her. “If this thing goes down, I’m going down with it. And I’m going to stick it out.”

Twenty-six years later, and in the WNBA’s 30th season, Reeve is the all-time winningest head coach at a time when the league has never been more popular.

Cheryl Reeve reacts during the Lynx’s July 6 game. Getty Images Reeve, 59, captured her 380th regular-season win with the Minnesota Lynx Wednesday to unseat legendary coach Mike Thibault.

She looks to potentially add to the record Saturday when the Lynx host the Liberty.

Reeve’s persistence coupled with her competitive fire and sustained success have made her one of the greatest coaches of this millennium.

Reeve is a four-time WNBA champion, vying for her fifth this season after many counted the Lynx out due to roster turnover and uncertainty heading into this campaign.

Fresh off of being inducted into the Women’s Basketball Hall of Fame late last month, Reeve is a frontrunner for Coach of the Year, an award she’s won four times already.

In a profession where people are hired to be fired, Reeve is a rarity.

She’s a trademark of longevity, having spent the past 16-plus years with the Lynx.

Making the playoffs is an expectation for the franchise under Reeve.

As a result, Minnesota has gone to 14 of the past 15 postseasons and appeared in seven WNBA Finals during that span.

Reeve on Friday recalled her early career challenges of being overlooked for WNBA jobs in favor of NBA men thought to be more qualified than her despite never coaching in the WNBA.

When she got the chance to coach the Lynx ahead of the 2010 season, she said she wasn’t worried about her contract length.

“I wanted the opportunity,” she said. “I didn’t care if it gave me one year. If I was good enough, I was good enough, and I still feel that way today. I’m not worried about my job and that’s a real blessing for me.”

As for the WNBA, Reeve said she is proud of how far the league has come.

Cheryl Reeve is pictured during the Lynx’s July 6 game. NBAE via Getty Images “I was always really hopeful at that time that we could get here,” she said. “We had to push, pull, drag, kick all the things, it doesn’t matter. The fight’s been worth it.

For years, Reeve tried to separate her identity from her job.

She loved to coach, and she loved basketball, but it wasn’t who Reeve saw herself as.

“It is my identity, and I can stand in that,” Reeve said. “I do care deeply about being a wife, being a mom, but ultimately basketball, it is my identity, it is my life. There’s no way around that, and I stand in that and there’s nothing to be ashamed of in saying that.”

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She has the same drive she had when she took the job 17 years ago.

She’s fueled by a desire to win a championship with her current group.

“I’m a pretty passionate person in general,” she said. “When that passion doesn’t hit the same way or it’s not there when I don’t care that we lost a possession, when I don’t care that we didn’t block out, or when I don’t care that we … whatever it is, that’s when you’ll know. But I can tell you, [my players] can tell you today that the passion’s still there.”

Read original at New York Post

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