2004 New York Liberty season

The 2004 WNBA season was the eighth season for the New York Liberty.

2004 New York Liberty season
CoachRichie Adubato
Pat Coyle (interim)
ArenaMadison Square Garden, Radio City Music Hall (6 games)
Attendance9,886 per game
Results
Record18–16 (.529)
Place2nd (Eastern)
Playoff finishLost Conference Finals (2-0) to Connecticut Sun

Dispersal Draft

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Based on the Liberty's 2003 record, they would pick 4th in the Cleveland Rockers dispersal draft. The Liberty picked Ann Wauters.

WNBA draft

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RoundPickPlayerNationalitySchool/Club Team
15Shameka Christon (G/F)  United StatesArkansas
217Amisha Carter (C)  United StatesLouisiana Tech
330Cathy Joens (G)  United StatesGeorge Washington

Regular season

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Heading into its eighth WNBA season, the club acquired veteran Ann Wauters in the dispersal draft and Shameka Christon in the college draft. The Liberty opened the season with a 6-1 record. Despite the strong start, Pat Coyle replaced Richie Adubato as head coach. Under Coyle’s guidance, the team registered an 11-6 mark and secured their sixth playoff appearance.

There were injuries to starters Ann Wauters and Tari Phillips. The Liberty played to a sellout crowd for six games at the historic Radio City Music Hall.[1] At Radio City Music Hall, the Liberty posted a 5-1 record. The reason for the relocation was that Madison Square Garden was hosting the 2004 Republican National Convention. In addition, the Liberty hosted another unique game: The Game at Radio City, which featured the USA Women’s Olympic team vs. a WNBA Select Team.[1]

Season standings

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Eastern Conference W L PCT GB Home Road Conf.
Connecticut Sun x1816.52910–78–914–6
New York Liberty x1816.52911–67–1010–10
Detroit Shock x1717.5001.08–99–811–9
Washington Mystics x1717.5001.011–66–119–11
Charlotte Sting o1618.4712.010–76–118–12
Indiana Fever o1519.4413.010–75–128–12

Season Schedule

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DateOpponentScoreResultRecord
May 21@ Indiana67-69Loss0-1
May 23Houston68-62Win1-1
May 26Detroit64-52Win2-1
May 30@ Minnesota68-64Win3-1
June 1@ Charlotte63-53Win4-1
June 3@ Houston71-62Win5-1
June 5@ San Antonio62-57Win6-1
June 11Indiana68-72Loss6-2
June 13@ Washington60-62Loss6-3
June 15Seattle62-86Loss6-4
June 19@ Indiana65-70Loss6-5
June 22Los Angeles49-65Loss6-6
June 24@ Phoenix60-72Loss6-7
June 26@ Seattle67-62Win7-7
June 29@ Los Angeles65-69Loss7-8
July 1@ Sacramento47-73Loss7-9
July 6Sacramento73-66Win8-9
July 8Washington54-71Loss8-10
July 11Phoenix77-69Win9-10
July 15Minnesota66-69Loss9-11
July 18Charlotte75-58Win10-11
July 20@ Charlotte80-74Win11-11
July 24Detroit*78-69Win12-11
July 30@ Detroit79-88Loss12-12
July 31Connecticut*80-66Win13-12
September 2Charlotte*56-52Win14-12
September 3@ Connecticut43-61Loss14-13
September 9@ Washington59-71Loss14-14
September 10Connecticut*66-77Loss14-15
September 12San Antonio*64-62Win15-15
September 14@ Detroit71-82Loss15-16
September 16Indiana*77-71Win16-16
September 17@ Connecticut69-66Win17-16
September 19Washington79-75Win18-16

Player stats

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Note: GP= Games played; REB= Rebounds; AST= Assists; STL = Steals; BLK = Blocks; PTS = Points

PlayerGPREBASTSTLBLKPTS
Becky Hammon34118150582460
Elena Baranova34246673758394
Crystal Robinson288358248339
Vickie Johnson34121124254321
Shameka Christon33682399191
Bethany Donaphin267116118131
La'Keshia Frett16401495102
Tari Phillips137016141087
Ann Wauters1340214882
DeTrina White31118981082
Erin Thorn17884134
K.B. Sharp3021336129

Playoffs

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GameDateOpponentScoreResultRecord
Eastern Conference Semifinals
1September 24@ Detroit75-62Win1-0
2September 26Detroit66-76Loss1-1
3September 28Detroit66-64Win2-1
Eastern Conference Finals
1October 1Connecticut51-61Loss2-2
2October 3@ Connecticut57-60Loss2-3

References

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  1. ^ a b "News Archive".