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Barbara Barker

Liberty's Bria Hartley balancing being a mom and professional basketball player

WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. _ It's a little after 8 a.m. and the morning rush is full-on at Bria Hartley's apartment in Westchester County.

The New York Liberty guard has been up with her 3{-month-old son, Bryson, for almost an hour. She has fed him, burped him and changed his diaper. She's dressed him in tiny Air Jordans and a favorite onesie. She's managed to get dressed for work herself. And she's done it all in that soupy-headed, sleep-deprived state that is a constant for most new parents whose babies have yet to sleep through the night.

"I eat breakfast at the training facility, so I save a little time there," says Hartley, who is expected to play her first regular-season game with the Liberty on Saturday at Madison Square Garden, despite having given birth less than four months ago.

A former star at the University of Connecticut, Hartley, 24, was traded to the Liberty from the Washington Mystics on Jan. 30, two weeks after Bryson's birth. The 5-8 guard is the first player with an infant to play for the Liberty, and is thought to be one of 10 players currently in the WNBA who have children.

Liberty coach Bill Laimbeer is no stranger to coaching players who also are new mothers. When Laimbeer was the coach of the Detroit Shock, Astou Ndiaye-Diatta came back a little more than three months after giving birth to triplets via C-section in 2003. Laimbeer's wife once told ESPN that she knew her husband had gone all-in on his job when she overheard him ordering a breast pump and three infant car seats for a road trip.

"Being a new mom can take a toll on the player because of all the work you have to now put in off the court. But it's really no different in sports than it is in the other workplaces," Laimbeer said. "You have to learn how to balance two lives. For a mom early on in the process with the feeding and everything, it's a grind and it wears you down, especially the physical part in professional sports. But at the end of the day, many millions of women have balanced this."

WNBA athletes have been negotiating the challenges of pregnancy and motherhood for two decades. In 1997, the league's inaugural season, Sheryl Swoopes challenged the way many in the public viewed childbirth and athletics when she returned to the court six weeks after giving birth and then led the Houston Comets to the WNBA title.

Just because having a child in the WNBA isn't out of the ordinary, doesn't make it easy. Having a baby during one's playing career can be emotionally, physically and financially taxing.

"I always wanted to be a mom and I always wanted to play professional basketball," Hartley said. "I didn't know exactly that this was going to be the timing. But life isn't always what you plan. This is exactly what I always wanted."

One of the first tough decisions Hartley had to make after finding out that she and her boyfriend, Shakim Phillips, were going to be parents was deciding when to tell Mystics coach Mike Thibault. Hartley played 24 games last season and was 4{ months pregnant when she left the team after her Olympic break. She said he had been cleared medically to play into her sixth month _ basically until the end of the regular season _ but decided to leave earlier because she didn't think it would be fair to the team if they made the playoffs and then she had to leave.

Hartley knew from talking to other players who had had babies that keeping herself in the best possible condition during pregnancy would make it easier for her to come back. After leaving Washington, she moved back to her parents' home in North Babylon and began working out with Britton Kelley, her longtime trainer.

"There's a lot of different opinions of what you can and cannot do when you're pregnant," Kelley said. "There are women out there who have run marathons two days before having a baby and then there's people out there who don't do anything and get completely deconditioned.

"I used a worth-to-risk ratio. I didn't want to do anything that could put her at risk where she could fall. I tried to keep her heart rate under 125 and stayed off the leg press. We worked right up until two days before she had the baby. With Bria, she's used to working so hard that a lot of what I had to do was hold her back."

Hartley, who gained a mere 17 pounds during her pregnancy, gave birth at Huntington Hospital on Jan. 14. Two weeks later, the Mystics gave her the baby present to end all baby presents: They announced she was being traded to the Liberty. Hartley was coming home.

WNBA players who are pregnant get paid 50 percent of their salary until they start playing again and continue to have full medical benefits, according to a league spokesperson. The minimum base salary for a player such as Hartley with three or more years experience is $55,825 for a 34-game regular season with the potential of bonuses for the playoffs and other hallmarks. Hiring a full-time nanny for many can be a severe financial strain.

In New York, Hartley has a tight-knit support group that has eased her transition back onto the court.

For the first couple of months, she lived on Long Island. Since training camp started, she has been living with Bryson and her father, Dennis Hartley, in an apartment complex that houses many of the Liberty players. A former professional boxer who is taking a break from work, Dennis takes care of Bryson in the mornings when Hartley is at practice.

"It's funny, because I didn't change any diapers when my kids were growing up," Dennis said with a laugh. "I was working all the time. Right now, the timing is good. He's a good baby."

Hartley's mother, Simone Hartley, works fulltime at a credit union on Long Island but helps out on weekends. In a couple weeks she will have a cousin who is graduating high school coming to help and likely will travel with Bryson and Hartley when the team goes on long road trips.

Phillips, a wide receiver who was on the Pittsburgh Steelers' practice squad in 2015 but waived last season, also is around quite a bit. Lately, their visits have been limited to video-chat as he's been flying around the country working out for different NFL teams.

The two met as students at UConn and lived in the same building. Phillips said he was more of a Bria fan than a women's basketball fan when the two met but now is crazy about the game and the fact she is playing it on the highest level.

"What she's doing I hope is giving out positivity to all women in the sport," Phillips said. "When you're in the WNBA you're allowed to have a family, just like any other professional athlete. I'm glad she's able to do it and stay positive. If you want to have a family, you don't have to stop chasing your dreams. You can do both."

You can. But it takes a unique sort of determination to make it work, a determination that those who know Hartley said she has.

Teresa Weatherspoon, the Liberty's director of player and franchise development, began working with Hartley six weeks after she gave birth. Hartley said she quickly got back to her playing weight of 143, but it had been a while since her body had been on the court dealing with the physical aspects of the game.

"We started three times a week and I was very careful about contact," Weatherspoon said. "When it got closer to camp I wanted to be physical with her and she handled it well. She's mentally strong and very intelligent. I tested her will and she came out on top."

Her will was tested, and she came out on top. That's something that could happen again and again to Hartley this season as she does that mad juggling act with which most new parents are familiar.

As she approached her first Mother's Day weekend as a parent, Hartley couldn't be happier. She was planning to have a big crowd at Madison Square Garden for the season opener. Her parents were coming. Friends, too. And of course Bryson would be there, watching his mother do what she loves.

Said Hartley: "It's gonna be awesome."

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