UNCASVILLE, Conn. — Maya Moore has been to the mountaintop of women’s basketball more than almost anyone else in the history of the sport. She’s known the euphoria of seeing confetti fall after a grueling NCAA Tournament run; of battling through the best in the world to hoist a WNBA championship trophy; of hearing the national anthem play on the podium at the Olympic Games.

But the Missouri native Moore’s playing days are long behind her now, and she doesn’t yearn for the highs that came with being on the court. At 36, she finds the same spark in watching her three-year-old son pick up the basics of potty training.

“He had his first successful poopoo in the potty recently, and it’s just like, this is it. This is like, championship-level joy,” Moore said with a smile as she sat for her Na

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