Taylor was selected by the
Cleveland Rockers in the first round (11th overall) during the annual
WNBA draft on 20 April 2001. She starred for the Rockers for three seasons. In January 2004, the WNBA held a
dispersal draft, where the league's existing teams selected former players from the Rockers team. Taylor was selected as the first overall pick by the
Phoenix Mercury. Taylor's return to the Mercury in 2013 eventually had her other knee give in after six games, leading her to further surgery. Taylor spent the 2014 pre-season working with both the Mercury and the
Phoenix Suns health staff to make sure her return to basketball worked. Under new coach and former Australia teammate
Sandy Brondello, Taylor saw limited minutes during the first eleven games of the
2014 WNBA season. Once Brondello saw her recovered enough, Taylor returned as a Mercury starter, and the team would then go on to win the following 16 games, the longest win streak in WNBA history and not lose again at home for the remainder of the 2014 season. Taylor's return helped lead the team to the best result in the Western Conference with an average of 10.5 points a game for 33 games, as well as the best record in league history with 29 wins and 5 losses, only one of whom had Taylor as a starter. The Mercury returned to the WNBA Finals,
winning the title against the
Chicago Sky. An unsigned free agent in 2015, she decided to sit out the 2015 season for personal reasons after the loss of her father. The Mercury re-signed her on 8 February 2016, and Taylor was present right at the first game to start her thirteenth season at the WNBA. Her last career game happened on 2 October in Phoenix, as the Mercury were swept by the
Minnesota Lynx in the WNBA semifinals. ==International basketball==