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Resilient Fever

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The Fever’s season ended as it had so often been played — with them at the edge of exhaustion, holding on with everything they had, and refusing to surrender. True, their overtime loss in Game Five of the semifinal round series to the heavily favored Aces spoiled their Cinderella story. On the other hand, it likewise confirmed their utter refusal to be defined by outcome; down bodies and down to fumes, they stayed in the fight throughout the second half and the extra period.

The best-of-five affair had already taken its toll. Injuries and absences forced constant recalibration, with rotations redrawn on the fly and roles stretched thin. When Most Valuable Player candidate Kelsey Mitchell crumpled to the floor in the third quarter due to cramps, it seemed as if the Fever’s improbable run had finally reached its breaking point. Rather than fold, however, they resisted. Head coach Stephanie White’s urgent message was clear: play for each other and lean into what had hitherto enabled them to claim victories as decided underdogs. And, lo and behold, they did. When All-Star Aliyah Boston fouled out and their bench was stripped bare with 27.1 ticks left in regulation, hardship acquisition Odyssey Sims picked up the cudgels; she hit a crucial shot to tie the set-to and send it to overtime. It was the latest in a season-long string of unlikely contributions that kept them alive longer than reason should have allowed.

What defined the Fever in the playoffs was not star power, but collective resolve. White spoke glowingly of her charges in the aftermath, noting that they resolved to put one foot in front of the other, and were unwilling to give up no matter the circumstance. And, needless to say, they gave the same refrain in the post-mortem; theirs was not a team of excuses but of persistence, determined to meet pressure with poise. Mitchell carried them when able, Boston when called upon, Sims when the moment demanded it, and the rest when no choice was left. Even injured superstar Caitlin Clark, watching from the sidelines, chose not to dwell on what might have been; instead, she reminded her teammates of what they had built together, insisting there was all pride and no regret to carry forward.

The final margin told one story; the manner of play unfolded another. The Fever were never supposed to come to a contest — a basket, really — of the WNBA Finals, not with their health, not against the defending champions, not in a decisive encounter on the road. Yet, as Aces bench tactician Becky Hammon admitted with a mix of relief and respect, the just would not go away. They turned every instance into a test of character, and in so doing forced the juggernaut black and silver to leave nothing in the tank simply to escape.

There is beauty in such defiance. The Fever leave their 2025 campaign scarred, to be sure, but also with a foundation strengthened by trial. Their resilience was not a momentary flicker; it became a standard. And what they proved in defeat may well carry more weight than any single win: Adversity need not define you, perseverance can be its own legacy, and belief, once planted, does not fade easily. Their season has ended, but its echoes will carry into what comes next — measured not only in triumphs, but in the determination that made them possible.

Anthony L. Cuaycong has been writing Courtside since BusinessWorld introduced a Sports section in 1994. He is a consultant on strategic planning, operations and human resources management, corporate communications, and business development.