hoophuskie, your response to my post is greatly appreciated. You went way back into the memory banks and provided a lengthy rebuttal to the claim of Diana Taurasi's lack of impact on the defensive end. Your statement about not having to be a ball hawk, a shot blocker, or the best defender on the court to impact the game defensively are quite true.
However:
1. The 2007 championship series with Detroit was not won with defense. Detroit averaged 87 points a game in that series; Lost Game 5 with a 92 point effort. Detroit averaged 74 points in their previous series against Indiana, and 66 points in their first round matchup with New York.
2. The fact that Detroit scored significantly more and Phoenix was even more potent offensively might explain the closing of the rebounding gap that you mentioned; There were fewer shots coming off the boards.
3. As mentioned, defense was not what won that series for Phoenix. And, if Ms Taurasi had an impact from her position in the middle of the 3-2 zone, it was not reflected in the scores. Teams utilize zone defenses to thwart inside scoring, against teams with suspect outside shooting, to hide defensive liabilities, to protect players in foul trouble, as a change of pace, and to allow teams to focus their attention on a particularly gifted offensive player. There are, likely, a slew of other reasons. However, a team going to a zone does not make a strong case for an individual player's defensive prowess. Of course, there are exceptions. If you are David Wingate hounding Chris Mullin in a box and one, or if you are blocking or altering shots on the perimeter, breaking up passes, etc. What won that series for Phoenix was being able to squeeze even more offense out of an already extremely potent offense by running the offense through Cappie Pondexter.
4. You asked two questions in your response, both of them pretty much the same question about rebounding shooting guards. While the distinction between shooting guards and point guards is not always obvious, an effort will be made here to list shooting guards as opposed to obvious point guards. The question: Shooting guards who could rebound as well as Diana Taurasi in her prime? Off the top of my head; DeWanna Bonner, Elena Della Donne, Angel McCoughtry, Cappie Pondexter, Sheryl Swoopes, Nykesha Sales, Cheryl Cooper. Admittedly, the list is not that long and all of these ballplayers named are outstanding. Ms Swoopes, in leading Texas Tech to the 1993 national championship was not only the record setting leading scorer in that series, but, from her guard position, was the leading rebounder.
You could not have posed this question without first knowing Ms Taurasi's rebounding stats and her standing among guards in the league. Are you about to shock me with some mind numbing stats? Asked because this is the only point about which I feel slightly vulnerable. Ms Taurasi is a six foot guard, extremely competitive, and, as you say, quite strong, so she is bound to get a fair share of rebounds.