The Phoenix Mercury dominated from start to finish at Mortgage Matchup Center on Saturday, handing the Seattle Storm a 93-73 defeat in front of the home crowd in Phoenix. The 20-point margin was a statement win for Phoenix, powered by a balanced offensive effort and a suffocating defensive performance that kept Seattle well below its scoring potential throughout the night.
Valeriane Ayayi was the engine of the Mercury’s attack, finishing with a game-high 18 points to go along with 10 rebounds — a commanding double-double that set the tone on both ends of the floor. Her ability to score and clean the glass gave Phoenix a consistent interior presence that Seattle struggled to answer. Equally impressive was guard Noemie Brochant, who orchestrated the Mercury offense with a game-best 10 assists, keeping the ball moving and finding open teammates at a high rate all evening.
For Seattle, Natisha Hiedeman was the lone bright spot, leading the Storm with 20 points and adding 4 assists. Her individual effort was admirable, but it wasn’t nearly enough to offset the collective struggles her team faced on the offensive end. Awa Fam contributed 10 rebounds to give Seattle a presence on the glass, but the Storm’s shooting woes proved insurmountable.
The team statistics tell the story of how lopsided this contest truly was. Seattle connected on just 25 of 70 field goal attempts, a dismal 36 percent clip that made it nearly impossible to keep pace with Phoenix. From beyond the arc, the Storm were even worse, converting only 8 of 28 three-point attempts for a 29 percent mark. Despite shooting a respectable 88 percent from the free-throw line — going 15 of 17 — Seattle simply could not generate enough quality looks to mount any sustained threat.
The Storm also coughed the ball up 11 times in total, including 10 individual turnovers and one team turnover, which Phoenix converted into easy transition opportunities throughout the game. Seattle’s 17 assists suggested some ball movement, but with a field goal percentage that low, those passes rarely translated into points when it mattered most. The Storm hauled in 9 offensive rebounds, giving themselves second chances, but their inability to finish at the rim or knock down open perimeter shots negated much of that hustle.
Phoenix, by contrast, played with the kind of efficiency and composure that a home crowd demands. Brochant’s 10 assists reflected an unselfish offensive system that found Ayayi and others in favorable positions repeatedly. The Mercury’s defense held Seattle to a total of just 29 rebounds, limiting the Storm’s opportunities to generate momentum off the glass.
The victory was a convincing one for Phoenix, who controlled the pace and never allowed Seattle to string together the kind of run that might have made things interesting. With Ayayi producing at an All-Star level and Brochant running the show with precision, the Mercury look like a formidable squad capable of making noise in the Western Conference. The Storm, meanwhile, will need to address their shooting efficiency and ball security if they hope to rebound in their next outing.