By Tamryn Spruill We have a high level of competition, players emerge as stars, we build household names and we build these rivalries. That’s how WNBA Commissioner Cathy Engelbert will measure success of the league’s 25th-anniversary season. Expected to tip off in mid-May, plans for the 2021 WNBA season signal an edging toward normalcy -- as much as health-and-safety protocols and vaccination rollout will allow. "Success, number one, is that we have a healthy season for our players, staff and fans,” Engelbert says during a phone call on Friday. “Number two is that we elevate the WNBA and the value of these professional working athletes in society.” The players' value, as the 2020 season of pandemic and social justice protest attests, is of leadership and transformation. A fight for justice for Breonna Taylor’s family in collaboration with the #SayHerName campaign branched into a fight against Kelly Loeffler’s bid for reelection in the Georgia Senate race. The "Vote Warnock" shirts...