Pro Basketball
Jason Collins Signs With Nets, Becoming First Openly Gay N.B.A. Player
LOS ANGELES — Jason Collins, a 35-year-old center, signed a 10-day contract with the Nets
on Sunday afternoon, putting him back in an N.B.A. uniform for the
first time since last spring, when he announced that he was gay.
The
signing represents a significant step toward transforming North
American professional sports into a more welcoming environment for gay
athletes. Entering Sunday night, no N.B.A. game had taken place with an
openly gay player on the floor. The N.F.L., Major League Baseball and
the N.H.L. — the continent’s other three traditional major sports
leagues — have also never had a publicly gay participant.
The
very act of Collins’s suiting up and stepping onto the court, then,
would represent a milestone in the effort to change a sports culture
that some feel has lagged far behind society at large in acceptance of
gay people.
Collins
said he had little time to process it all. He awoke Sunday morning to
text messages from his agent and Nets Coach Jason Kidd alerting him to
the move, and hours later he was signing his contract. A few hours after
that, he was taking his physical and preparing to play his first game
since April 17.
“Right
now, I’m focused on trying to learn the plays, the game plan
assignment,” Collins, sitting at a lectern, said less than an hour
before the game Sunday night. “I don’t have time to really think about
history right now.”
The
sense of history was inevitable, though. It seemed noteworthy that the
first openly gay player in one of America’s major sports leagues would
play for a Brooklyn team. In 1947, Jackie Robinson of the Brooklyn
Dodgers became the first black player in baseball.
It
felt significant, too, that the Nets’ owner, Mikhail D. Prokhorov, is
from Russia, where President Vladimir V. Putin has come under intense
scrutiny for a law that bans gay “propaganda.”
“Today
Jason Collins tore open the last remaining closet in America,” said
Brian Ellnor, a founding member of Athlete Ally, a nonprofit that raises
awareness about homophobia in sports. “This is a piece of history, an
important point on the continuum toward justice and a moment to
celebrate.”
Many
felt that such a moment was overdue. Last April, after spending the
2012-13 regular season with the Boston Celtics and the Washington
Wizards, Collins announced in a Sports Illustrated article that he was
gay.
He
was met with widespread support and earned a measure of celebrity — but
not a new contract to play basketball. He was not invited to any team’s
training camp and spent the last several months working out at his home
in Los Angeles, readying himself in case a team called.
Collins’s
arrival with the Nets began to take shape two weeks ago, when he worked
out for them in Los Angeles over the All-Star break. The Nets, who need
help with interior defense and rebounding, were also interested in Glen
Davis, who was bought out of his contract last week by the Orlando
Magic. With Davis appearing to be near an agreement with the Los Angeles
Clippers, though, the Nets shifted their focus on Sunday to Collins.
Collins,
like any N.B.A. player, can sign two consecutive 10-day contracts
before the Nets must either sign him for the rest of the season or
release him.
“The
decision to sign Jason was a basketball decision,” General Manager
Billy King said in a statement. “We needed to increase our depth inside,
and with his experience and size, we felt he was the right choice for a
10-day contract.”
Collins
has never been a standout player at the professional level — he has
averaged 3.6 points, 3.8 rebounds and 0.5 blocks per game in his career —
but he has consistently earned plaudits for his professionalism and
smarts on the court.
As
a Nets player, the 7-foot, 255-pound Collins will be valued for his
ability to provide a disciplined application of the coaches’ defensive
scheme, to read opponents’ movements and to communicate to teammates
what he sees.
Collins
will be a familiar face to many in and around the organization. He
spent his first six and a half seasons with the Nets, who reached the
N.B.A. finals twice during his tenure. It was during that time, too,
that he became good friends with Kidd, who is in his first season as the
Nets’ coach.
Collins,
who has played for five other N.B.A. teams, played alongside Joe
Johnson when the two were with the Atlanta Hawks, and spent part of last
season with the Celtics, playing with Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce.
Johnson, Garnett and Pierce are now his teammates.
“Guys
already know what to expect from me,” Collins said. “I’m not going to
magically have a 40-inch vertical and shoot 3s. My game has been pretty
consistent, you know. I’m a defensive player first, and that’s what I
pride myself on.”
Collins is re-entering an American sports landscape that has changed for gay athletes since he last played.
Robbie
Rogers, 26, came out publicly last February while simultaneously
announcing that he would retire from professional soccer. But Rogers
changed course in May, joining the Los Angeles Galaxy and going on to
play 11 games last season.
And
this month, Michael Sam, 24, announced that he was gay shortly after
completing a four-year college football career at Missouri. Football
analysts expect Sam, a highly regarded defensive lineman, to be selected
in May at the N.F.L. draft.
“Jason
told us that his goal was to earn another contract with an N.B.A.
team,” the league’s commissioner, Adam Silver, said in a statement.
“Today, I want to commend him on achieving his goal. I know everyone in
the N.B.A. family is excited for him and proud that our league fosters
an inclusive and respectful environment.”
Kidd
and Collins stressed that their focus was on basketball. That may have
been the case, but it was hard even for them to ignore the attention and
the significance of the moment.
Collins was asked what message he might send to gay athletes who were watching him.
“My
message to other athletes, period, is just be yourself,” he said. “Be
your true, authentic self and never be afraid or ashamed or have any
fear to be your true authentic self.”
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