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Big fourth quarter propels Mystics past Storm
Joe Nicholson-Imagn Images

Washington tallied 27 fourth-quarter points and overcame a poor shooting night from distance to knock off Seattle 74-69, climbing over the .500 mark for the first time since May.

Led by rookie All-Star Kiki Iriafen, Shakira Austin and leading scorer Brittney Sykes (17.5 points per game), Washington held down the paint. The Mystics outrebounded the Storm 36-29 and outscored them 48-30 in the paint to claim their third win in a row, matching a season-high.

Ezi Magbegor led Seattle with a season-high 19 points.

The Mystics entered the fourth quarter down by 10 before outscoring Seattle 27-14 in the final frame.

Washington's second rookie All-Star, Sonia Citron, went on a personal 5-0 run to help snatch the lead from Seattle and take a 62-61 advantage with 4:28 left in the game. She finished the game with 17 points.

Sykes, who tallied a team-best 19 points, converted a layup to put Washington up by three with about 20 seconds left. Facing a 72-69 deficit, Skylar Diggins caught a pass in the corner, but narrowly stepped out of bounds and turned it over to effectively seal the game.

Diggins, who leads Seattle in points and assists per game, had a quiet shooting night, going 4-for-14 from the field and scoring only 10 points.

The third frame swung the game in Seattle's favor, as it outscored Washington 27-16 and took an eight-point lead.

Washington's offense looked anemic for most of the third quarter. After Stefanie Dolson made a three at the 9:28 mark, the Mystics didn't convert another field goal for almost eight minutes. They notched only four paint points in the quarter, and their shooting remained cold.

The visitors misfired on 11-of-14 shots from behind the arc for the contest.

In the first quarter, Washington's defensive tenacity seemed to roll over from their 70-68 win over the Las Vegas Aces on Thursday. Seattle started the game 3-for-18 from the field, with two of their made attempts being 3-pointers from forward Nneka Ogwumike.

Still, the Storm only found themselves down 16-10 after one quarter.

Seattle's offense shook off the slow start in the second quarter, taking a 22-20 lead on a Gabby Williams layup at the 6:41 mark. Despite poor shooting, the Mystics rallied and led 31-28 at halftime Washington went 0-for-7 from three and 5-for-11 on free throws in the first half.

Both teams struggled with turnovers in the first half, committing eight each.

This article first appeared on Field Level Media and was syndicated with permission.

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