(Reuters) – Veteran NBA player Jason Collins signed a 10-day contract with the Brooklyn Nets on Sunday, making him the first openly gay athlete on a team roster in any of North America’s four major professional sports leagues.
Collins, who last April revealed that he was gay in a Sports Illustrated article that was published after the National Basketball Association regular season, joined the Nets before their Sunday game in Los Angeles against the Lakers.
Official: The #Nets have signed @jasoncollins34 to a 10-day contract, the NBA team announced on Twitter.
The 35-year-old is not a well-known sports star but won widespread praise for his groundbreaking personal statement issued 10 months ago. Collins, who was nearing the end of his career, was not subsequently signed for the 2013-2014 season.
NBA Commissioner Adam Silver was quick to issue a welcoming statement.
Jason told us that his goal was to earn another contract with an NBA team, said Silver.
Today, I want to commend him on achieving his goal. I know everyone in the NBA family is excited for him and proud that our league fosters an inclusive and respectful environment.
Nets general manager Billy King stressed that the signing of the 7-foot center helped the Atlantic division team on the court.
The decision to sign Jason was a basketball decision. 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, King said in a statement.
NOT PLANNED
Collins, who has played with six different teams during his 12 years in the NBA, has said he never had any grand plans to be the first openly gay player but that events off the basketball court persuaded him to come out.
Collins was inspired by the 2012 Gay Pride Parade in Boston, he told Sports Illustrated, but delayed making an announcement due to a desire to protect his team, waiting until the regular 2012-2013 season ended.
He also said he had been prompted by the Boston Marathon bombings last April, which killed three people and wounded more than 200.
I wish I wasn’t the kid in the classroom raising his hand and saying, ‘I’m different.’ said Collins, who played the 2012-13 season with the Boston Celtics and then the Washington Wizards before becoming a free agent.
If I had my way, someone else would have already done this. Nobody has, which is why I’m raising my hand.
Collins’ signing with the Nets comes just two weeks after Michael Sam, a promising college football player who is expected to be selected in the National Football League’s upcoming draft, came out as gay.
I’m Michael Sam. I’m a football player and I’m gay, Sam, a defensive lineman, said in a video posted on the New York Times website. I just want to own my truth before anyone breaks a story about me.
REWRITING SCRIPT
Gay rights organizations greeted Sam’s announcement with enthusiasm. Sarah Kate Ellis, the president of GLAAD, a media advocacy organization, said Sam had rewritten the script for countless young athletes.
Sam, a 6-foot, 2-inch, 260-pound (118 kg) pass rusher, was named Defensive Player of the Year in the Southeastern Conference (SEC) after leading the SEC with 11.5 sacks and 19 tackles for a loss, and was projected to be mid-round pick in the upcoming seven-round NFL draft.
However, it is Collins and not Sam, as thought after the football player’s announcement, who will become the first openly gay player to compete in one of the four major U.S. men’s professional leagues – football, baseball, basketball and hockey.
Other gay athletes, including former NBA center John Amaechi, had waited until their retirement to divulge their sexuality publicly, but there has been a growing sense that times were changing.
Early last year, American soccer player Robbie Rogers outed himself the same day he retired from the game, but he returned to action in late May with Major League Soccer’s Los Angeles Galaxy and was greeted with cheers when he took to the field as a substitute in a match against the Seattle Sounders.
Brittney Griner, one of the country’s top women’s basketball players, now with the Phoenix Mercury of the WNBA, said she too was gay.
Still, the reception of gay athletes in the locker rooms of the major sports was still an open question.
During the buildup to last year’s Super Bowl in New Orleans, San Francisco 49ers cornerback Chris Culliver told reporters he would not welcome a gay team mate into the locker room.
He later retracted his comments.
All of us have huge admiration for what Jason is doing, said Patrick Burke, co-founder of equal rights advocacy group You Can Play.
Jason’s courage in stepping forward with his personal story will provide athletes and fans with a new role model.
(Reporting by Mark Lamport-Stokes in Los Angeles; Editing by Larry Fine)