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Candace dunks ... again? - The Heat Index

Candace dunks ... again?

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In the LA Sparks 77-63 victory over the Indiana Fever last night, Candace Parker became just the second woman in WNBA history to dunk in a game. But no doubt, their will be some who say it wasn't a "true dunk." And I've got a tiny problem with that.

It's not that I don't understand the critics. It is true that all those years of watching Michael Jordan hang on the rim after a tongue-wagging diabolical dunk has defined our perception of what a dunk is. However, I'm not going to compare Candace to MJ. It's not fair, not because she's a woman but because it's not fair to compare anyone to MJ. Oh, and it's also not fair because she is a woman and the two sexes approach the game differently. That is a fact, not a misogynistic statement.

Many of Candace's dunks in college were criticized for various reasons. The two she made against Army during the 2006 NCAA Tournament were dubbed "slam lay-ins" by critics like columnist Jason Whiltock over on ESPN's Page 2, who also compared Parker's dunking ability to that of an 8th grade boy. A little harsh, especially coming from the portly Whitlock, who might be able to accomplish a "slam lay-in" if he had a trampoline and replaced one of the sandwiches in his hands with a basketball.

And don't think I'm taking ugly potshots at Whitlock. I can't dunk. I'm so short I couldn't even even touch the rim back when I wasn't 20 pounds overweight. So, my hat's off to Candace. I'm just saying that people in glass houses shouldn't throw bricks.

I will admit that the dunks against Army were not earth shattering. Last night's dunk against Indiana wasn't either. I don't think we'll ever see a monster, glass-shattering dunk in the WNBA or women's college hoops. And that's fine with me because women approach the game with more finesse than men. That's a compliment, by the way and is the main reason I won't compare Candace's dunking to that which we see in the men's game. Clearly to dunk in the WNBA mean's something different than to dunk in the NBA.

The only fair way to compare Candace is to put her up against the only other woman to have dunked in the league, her teammate Lisa Leslie. Let's be the Supreme Court for a minute and assume that Leslie established precedent when she dunked in 2002. If so, then it's clear after watching the videos below that if Leslie dunked, Candace dunked. To go a bit further, if Leslie's dunk in 2002 set the precedent for dunking in women's basketball at all levels, then Candace dunked twice against Army while at Tennessee.

Leslie's dunk, 2002:

Candace's dunk, 2008:

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Brad Engel

Brad Engel is the longest-tenured member of The Sun sports staff and has won several national and state awards in his coverage of preps as well as the Chicago Bears, Chicago Fire and general sports.

Paul LaTour

Paul LaTour has been honored with national awards in each of the last three years and currently serves as The Sun's sports enterprise writer in addition to his duties covering high school and college sports.

Dustin Michael Harris

Dustin Michael Harris joined The Sun in August 2005 and has covered everything from high school sports to men's college basketball in addition to his new role as one of The Sun's sports columnists.

Patrick Mooney

Patrick Mooney covered politics, prep sports and professional baseball for several print and online media outlets before joining The Sun in August 2007. He concentrates on prep sports, writing features, profiles and breaking recruiting news.

Sean Fuchs

Sean Fuchs joined The Sun in January 2008 and covers prep football in addition to swimming and diving and other high school sports. During his career, he’s won national awards covering prep, college and pro sports.

Brad Nolan

Brad Nolan worked as a Sun sports staff writer for nearly five years before taking over as sports editor in April 2005. Since then, The Sun has continued to be honored as one of the top sports sections in the nation.

Chris Sosa

Chris Sosa formerly served as The Sun's assistant city editor before taking the assistant sports editor position in January 2007. He also writes a weekly sports column for The Sun.

D.J. Wanberg

D.J. Wanberg has served in several different capacities during his long-standing career with The Sun. Most recently, he worked as a sports staff writer and sports night editor until being named associate sports editor in 2006.

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This page contains a single entry by Dustin Michael Harris published on June 23, 2008 12:31 PM.

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