Minnesota comfortably beat Indiana 69-52 on Wednesday to clinch a third WNBA title in five years, powered by a suffocating defence and a yearning to celebrate in front of their loyal fans.
Sylvia Fowles had 20 points and 11 rebounds, Seimone Augustus added 16 points and Rebekkah Brunson grabbed 14 rebounds for the Lynx, who also won the crown in 2011 and 2013.
Maya Moore scored just five points on 1-for-8 shooting, but the Lynx forced 21 turnovers and held Indiana to 35.7 per cent shooting in the league's first game-five decider since 2009.
Tamika Catchings had 18 points and 11 rebounds for Indiana, who were chasing a second championship.
Finally, the Lynx were able to celebrate on their home court.
They won their first two titles on the road in Atlanta, forcing the success-starved Twin Cities sports fans to revel from afar. When the final buzzer sounded, a franchise-record 18,933 fans waved white towels while singer Prince watched from a suite above Target Center's lower bowl.
Augustus shed tears of joy after a throwback performance. Owner Glen Taylor hugged coach Cheryl Reeve and Moore leaped on to the scorer's table and pumped her fists toward the crowd.
"We kept grinding and working despite everything that we've been through," Augustus said.
It was a stunning collapse for the previously unflappable Fever, who had staved off elimination five straight times in the playoffs leading into game five.
Briann January and Catchings helped turn Indiana into a tough, confident bunch that erased an 18-point deficit to beat the New York Liberty in game two of the Eastern Conference finals, but finally ran into a wall they couldn't break through.
In the second and third quarters, the Fever scored only 12 points and turned the ball over 17 times.
Star guard January scored six points in the first quarter for Indiana, but didn't get her next bucket until six minutes were gone in the third. She finished with 13 points on 6-for-15 shooting.
"They just outplayed us in every single way," Fever coach Stephanie White said. "They looked like a team that was on a mission and they played like it."
It was an ugly start to the game, with the Lynx slugging out a 27-21 lead at halftime in the lowest-scoring first half in finals history.