Jason Collins becomes first out basketball player to play in NBA

Brooklyn seems perfect match for 35-year-old centre

Back in April 2013, Daily Xtra asked Brooklyn Nets’ fans what they thought of Jason Collins coming out as a gay man. Their reactions suggest that the Nets’ signing of Collins to a 10-day contract on Feb 22, 2014, is a great fit.

Basketball player Jason Collins signed a 10-day contract with the Brooklyn Nets on Sunday, Feb 23; later that day he made history by becoming the first openly gay man to play an NBA game. Collins, who played with the Nets (at the time they were the New Jersey Nets) and other NBA teams earlier in his career, came out as a gay man in April 2013. Sunday’s NBA game was the first he has played since coming out.

Last April, Daily Xtra sent a camera to Barclays Center in Brooklyn to gauge Nets fans’ reactions to Collins’s coming out. Judging by their comments in the above video, it would appear Collins landed in the right place.

“I think it was about time somebody did it,” one fan said.

Brooklyn has a history of hosting breakthroughs in sport. In 1947, Jackie Robinson became the first black man to play major league baseball when he signed with the Brooklyn Dodgers.

Read More About:
Video, Power, News, Canada, Sports

Keep Reading

Renée Richards at a tennis match

The complicated legacy of Renée Richards

The former tennis player broke barriers for trans athletes in 1977. Then she changed her tune
Supporters of HIV AIDS research participate in the 2025 Toronto Pride Parade

Toronto man set to be the first Canadian cured of HIV

The patient received a stem cell transplant for his cancer that acted as a “double cure” because it contained a rare genetic mutation resistant to HIV
A photo of the outside of the New York Times building in New York City

Only 1 in 5 ‘New York Times’ news stories about trans issues quote actual trans people: report

A new 'Assigned Media' report found that the 'New York Times' rarely cited trans people in coverage about trans issues
A side by side of images from On Our Backs, a lesbian magazine.

The radical legacy of ‘On Our Backs’ magazine

“On Our Backs” filled a void by authentically documenting—and celebrating—lesbian sexuality
Advertisement