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Lynx center Sylvia Fowles has been named Defensive Player of the Year in the WNBA, by The Associated Press. It is the third time in the six years the award had been given out that Fowles has been the winner.

Also a member of the U.S. women's basketball team that won a gold medal in Tokyo this summer, Fowles has been Minnesota's second-leading scorer with 16 points per game. She also averaged 10.8 rebounds, 1.8 blocks and 1.8 steals during the regular season, which ended Sunday.

Fowles, 35, was second in the league in rebounds, steals and blocks — and also led the WNBA with a .640 field goal percentage.

Sylvia Fowles career statistics

Jonquel Jones of Connecticut was the unanimous choice as the AP Player of the Year.

In previous years, the forward has been honored by the media that votes on the weekly AP WNBA power poll as the Sixth Woman of the Year and Most Improved Player.

The WNBA will announce its league awards over the course of the postseason, which begins Thursday.

Jones guided Connecticut to the best record in the league and the top seed in the WNBA playoffs.

"She's been tremendous all year long from Day 1 that she arrived," said Sun coach Curt Miller, who was unanimously chosen as the AP's Coach of the Year. "With Alyssa Thomas out the majority of the year she had the opportunity to be a facilitator, getting the ball off the defensive glass and bringing it up herself."

Jones finished the season averaging a career-best 19.4 points and a league-leading 11.2 rebounds.

"She is the elite rebounder in the world when she plays," said Miller, who won the Coach of the Year award for the second time. "She anchored a historic rebounding season for us. She's the main piece for that. We hung our hat on that. The record-breaking type of season we had rebounding wise is a contributing factor to our win-loss success."

The Sun also have the AP's Most Improved Player in Brionna Jones. She averaged a career-best 14.7 points, 7.3 rebounds and shot 57.1% from the field.

Other winners included:

— Kelsey Plum is the Sixth Woman of the Year, ending Las Vegas teammate Dearica Hamby's two-year run as the league's top reserve. Plum also earned the Comeback Player of the Year award. She missed last season with an Achilles' tendon injury only to return this year and average a career-best 14.8 points and 3.6 assists.

"Comeback means a lot more to me than the sixth man," Plum said. "I don't know what people expected from me coming back. I knew it would be like this. It's cool that other people can see that."

Plum said she is happy she can inspire others, not just athletes, who have been hurt that they too can overcome major injuries. She had been inspired by Breanna Stewart, who had returned from the same the year before.

As far as keeping the Sixth Woman of the Year award in the Las Vegas family, she credited Hamby for being a big reason she was able to adjust to playing well coming off the bench.

"To me it's a co-award and I'm accepting it with Dearica," Plum said. "Me and her have been through alot and it's not easy coming off the bench knowing you're a quality starter and player in this league. She really helped me since she's been given this role for so many years and handled it with such grace."

— Michaela Onyenwere was the unanimous choice as Rookie of the Year. The No. 6 pick of the New York Liberty averaged 8.6 points and started 29 of the 32 games this season.

"It's an honor knowing the players who have come before me," Onyenwere said. "I couldn't have done it without my teammates and coaches who believed in me from the start."

Onyenwere was joined on the AP all-rookie team by her teammate Didi Richards, Aari McDonald of Atlanta, Dana Evans of Chicago and Charli Collier of Dallas.

The AP's first-team all league includes Jonquel Jones, Brittney Griner, Skylar Diggins-Smith, Breanna Stewart and Tina Charles. The second team is A'ja Wilson, Jewell Loyd, Fowles, Candace Parker and Courtney Vandersloot,

POWER RANKINGS:

Connecticut was a unanimous first-place choice in the final AP power poll of the season. The Sun were followed by Las Vegas, Minnesota, Seattle, Phoenix. Chicago, Dallas, New York, Washington and Los Angeles were the next five. Atlanta and Indiana rounded out the field.

PLAYER OF THE WEEK

Loyd scored 37 points in a win over Phoenix that clinched the four-seed for the Seattle Storm and a first-round bye in the playoffs. The Storm's star guard matched a WNBA record with 22 points in the first quarter of that win. Other players receiving votes were Aerial Powers of Minnesota, Plum and Arike Ogunbowale of Dallas.