This week NBA basketball center, Jason Collins, announced in Sports Illustrated, "I'm a 34-year-old NBA center. I'm black. And I'm gay."
This statement was the first outing for a major professional athlete and considered courageous by nearly everyone. Rarely a starter Jason Collins played with the Celtics and Wizards this season, his 12th in the NBA, and the commentators on radio and TV cruelly stated that Jason Collins was a player deep on the bench and that no one had known his name before this event.
For anyone to hide who they are is a struggle and Jason Collins said, "I realized I needed to go public when Joe Kennedy, my old roommate at Stanford and now a Massachusetts congressman, told me he had just marched in Boston's 2012 Gay Pride Parade. I'm seldom jealous of others, but hearing what Joe had done filled me with envy. I was proud of him for participating but angry that as a closeted gay man I couldn't even cheer my straight friend on as a spectator."
Bravo, Jason, don't listen to those talking heads say that you were never a player of consequences.
None of them ever played in the NBA.
They never competed in two NBA finals.
You are now who you are.
I wish Jason Collins was playing for the Celtics against the Knicks tonight.
He knew how to give a foul and we need a big body in the paint.
Instead we have the phantom Fab Melo.
And no one has seen him this year.
Wednesday, May 1, 2013
Jason Collins Comes Out
This week NBA basketball center, Jason Collins, announced in Sports Illustrated, "I'm a 34-year-old NBA center. I'm black. And I'm gay."
This statement was the first outing for a major professional athlete and considered courageous by nearly everyone. Rarely a starter Jason Collins played with the Celtics and Wizards this season, his 12th in the NBA, and the commentators on radio and TV cruelly stated that Jason Collins was a player deep on the bench and that no one had known his name before this event.
For anyone to hide who they are is a struggle and Jason Collins said, "I realized I needed to go public when Joe Kennedy, my old roommate at Stanford and now a Massachusetts congressman, told me he had just marched in Boston's 2012 Gay Pride Parade. I'm seldom jealous of others, but hearing what Joe had done filled me with envy. I was proud of him for participating but angry that as a closeted gay man I couldn't even cheer my straight friend on as a spectator."
Bravo, Jason, don't listen to those talking heads say that you were never a player of consequences.
None of them ever played in the NBA.
They never competed in two NBA finals.
You are now who you are.
I wish Jason Collins was playing for the Celtics against the Knicks tonight.
He knew how to give a foul and we need a big body in the paint.
Instead we have the phantom Fab Melo.
And no one has seen him this year.
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