SEATTLE — The Seattle Storm dropped a tough one on Wednesday night, falling 93-83 to the Connecticut Sun despite a fast start and balanced scoring effort.

Seattle couldn’t slow down Tina Charles, who erupted for season highs of 29 points and 11 rebounds to help Connecticut snap a 10-game losing streak.

The Storm led 49-41 at halftime, with Skylar Diggins (23 points, 7 assists), Gabby Williams (21 points), Nneka Ogwumike (12 points, 12 rebounds), and Ezi Magbegor all scoring in double figures by the break.

ALSO SEE: Connecticut Sun end a 10-game losing streak with a 93-83 victory over the Seattle Storm

But a cold second half and a surge from the Sun allowed Connecticut (3-16) to earn its first win since June 6.

Here are three takeaways from the Storm’s recent loss:

1.Must win all four quarters.

In a league where roster spots are minuscule and loaded with talent, anyone could win or lose, no matter what the record attached to the organization is. Seattle led by as much as 14 in the first quarter and led the way until Hall of Famer Tina Charles gave Connecticut the lead and didn’t look back in the Sun’s 27-point 4th quarter.

I think we just didn’t execute,” Head coach Noelle Quinn said. “Our discipline, our sharpness, and all those things that need to happen to compete at a high level and close out games. It didn’t happen.

2.The consistency of being inconsistent

The storm started the three-game road trip with back-to-back wins over the Atlanta Dream (80-79) on July 4, and then the reigning WNBA champions, the New York Liberty (79-70) on July 6.

Our defense always dictates what we do offensively,” Quinn said. “We were able to score at a high clip for three-quarters, and that fourth quarter, I feel our execution was awful.

The “high clip” was three straight quarters with 20-plus points, but the storm closed out the game with a season low in the final quarter. “Nine points–not going to win games [playing] that bad in a 4th quarter,” Quinn said.

3.There needs to be a “change in mindset”

We disrespected Connecticut today,” Forward Gabby Williams said. “We went, okay, now we’re up, we can relaxWe got what we deserved today.” The “mindset” from a production standpoint for starters like Williams, Skylar Diggins, and Nneka Ogwumike was there as they combined for 86 points, but coach Quinn still expects continuous leadership aside from productivity “Our starters have to be sharper the entire game because they’re in certain lineups with bench players and It’s on them to hold and set the standard.

The Storm (12-8) now sits at third in the Western Conference standings and will have a shot at revenge back home in Seattle at Climate Pledge Arena this Friday, July 11.