Showing posts with label basketball. Show all posts
Showing posts with label basketball. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 30, 2013

Jason Collins Comes Out

Jason Collins (© Kwaku Alston/Sports Illustrated)
I continue to be tremendously impressed and moved by the courage of Jason Collins, a current NBA journeyman center and free agent, who announced yesterday in an article ins Sports Illustrated's current (May 6, 2013) online issue, "I'm a 34-year-old NBA center. I'm black. And I'm gay." With those words, he became and now is the "the first openly gay" male athlete playing in a major American male team sport. There have been a number of male and female athletes in individual sports--from Martina Navratilova and Billie Jean King in tennis, to Greg Louganis in diving, and lesbians, bi and trans women athletes in team sports, as well as male athletes in pro sports overseas who have come out. In addition, Sheryl Swoopes and most recently Brittany Griner, in the WNBA, are among the black gay American women who have come out playing for major American team sports. But Jason Collins represents a double first--the first man, and the first black American man, to come out while still active as a player for a major American pro team. He finished this season with the Washington Wizards, after beginning it with the Boston Celtics, and has also played for the former New Jersey Nets, Memphis Grizzlies, Minnesota Timberwolves, and Atlanta Hawks. Though he makes clear in the article that he did not set out to be the first, he has instantly become a trailblazer with this amazing step, and he deserves the highest praise for taking it.

Collins's eloquent Sports Illustrated testament goes beyond just coming out, exploring his journey to those opening lines. So much of what he describes--the fear, the anxiety, the despair, the pain, the ambivalence, the self-delusion, the almost crushing desire to be accepted, to fit it, to not be any more different--are things many lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex, and queer people have felt and still feel, sometimes after being out and living openly; coming out is and remains a process, and is never a final act, though that first step out, even today at a moment of fast-moving social progress and ever-expanding acceptance, at least among many in this country, of lgbtiq people, can often be the most difficult one, and for someone in Collins's position--a man of color, a professional athlete, a person raised in a Christian home, someone raised with black middle-class aspiration values--it probably did feel as difficult and risky as he describes. I am not a professional athlete, but many of the feelings he expresses are ones I and many people I know have felt intimately, deeply. Collins describes his journey in a way that welcomes all readers in, to understand what he has gone through, and where he hopes to go next with his life. It is a narrative of personal liberation, but it will probably have resonance in ways Collins has not ever imagined.

Many commentators online have noted how valuable Collins's comments will be for young people struggling with their sexual orientation, and I agree wholeheartedly with this. For young people of color, Collins, Brittany Griner, and many other out public figures probably will play a crucial role in self-acceptance. Seeing someone like themselves who is able to say "I am gay," who does not fall into the usual mainstream representations of queerness, will probably be invaluable. There are already many people who fit this category, but male professional team sport athlete was not one of them. Collins' coming out may also help people his own age and older who are grappling with their sexualities, and may help many heterosexual people who may still not accept and embrace lgbtiq people in part based on stereotypes, or who may still be carrying around abstracted ideas about who is lgbtiq. It may helped parents, grandparents, siblings--like Jason's twin brother, Jarron, who is straight--relatives, neighbors, all kinds of people who still have not been able to fully see the lgbtiq people around them, to see their humanity. Many of Collins's peers in the NBA like Kobe Bryant, Steve Nash, Dwyane Wade, Emeka Okafor, Al Horford, Jerry Stackhouse, Metta World Peace, and Baron Davis, past NBA legends like Karl Malone and Magic Johnson, stars in other sports like pioneer Martina Navratilova and , as well as other prominent figures across the society, including President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama, former President Bill Clinton, Collins's former Stanford roommate Congressman Joseph P. Kennedy III, and Oprah Winfrey, have all shown their support.

Collins's coming out may prove especially valuable to other male and female athletes who are not yet ready to come out or be out, to live openly publicly (though they may be out to those close to them), and have felt the same sort of pressures of heteronormativity and heterosexism, who because of homophobia believe they have to choose a spouse of the opposite sex and go through the motions of a relationship or a marriage, who have felt despair and because they don't see a single person like them willing and able to be out doing what they do, they feel they cannot be honest even to themselves. This is as true for white male professional team sport athletes as it is for black, latino, asian-american, native american, hapa, and other male professional team sport athletes. Jason Collins has opened that door, and walked through it, joining a number of amazing athletes, like John Amaechi, Kwame Harris, Esera Tuaolo, Roy Simmons, Dave Kopay, and others, who came out after ending their professional careers. It's unclear if any team will sign Collins, but given his talent, skills and determination, for the sheer sake of business, an NBA team would be foolish to pass him up. This doesn't mean there won't still be a bit of a freakshow, that homophobes won't rear their heads, that he won't meet with some rejection or indifference by teammates. I imagine he realizes this; we all do. Some of this backlash began almost as soon as the article and news broke. But he has opened the door, in a different but still significant way as predecessors like Jackie Robinson and Curt Flood did, and others, perhaps a small, single-file line, in the NBA, the NFL, the MLB, the NHL, and the MLS, will walk through, but even a few in one or several will be significant. So I cheer Jason Collins, and appreciate what he has done. I hope has the support he needs, and that all who follow him will be able to find and rely upon it as well.

Thursday, July 05, 2012

London Olympics Matchups to Watch

Two months ago I wrote about Josh Dixon, who was vying to become the first out black gay US Olympian by making this year's men's gymnastics team and heading to London for the summer games, which begin in 20 days. Dixon unfortunately did not make it. I'm still looking forward to the men's competition, though, and to a number of other matchups that will take place once the games begin.
John Orozco and Danell Leyva (© Kyle Terada, US Presswire)

Leading the men's gymnastics team will be two gymnasts whose names may not be widely known yet, but if they perform to their peaks, they'll be be on cereal boxes as well as the medal stand. For the first time ever, two Latinos will lead the US men's team: Danell Leyva (Team Hilton HHonors (Universal Gymnastics)), a Miami resident whose family immigrated from Cuba when he was 1/2 years old, and John Orozco (Team Hilton HHonors (US Olympic Training Center)), a Bronx-native of Puerto Rican ancestry and the 2012 Visa National Champion, have talent, skills and the drive to win big. Either one could earn the all around gold medal, and together they put the US at the forefront of the team competition. They'll be joined by Sam Mikulak (Newport Coast, CA/Univ. of Michigan), Jake Dalton (Reno, NV/Univ. of Oklahoma), and Jonathan Horton (Houston, TX/Team Hilton HHonors (Cypress)). Three replacement athletes will also accompany this quintet to London: Chris Brooks (Houston, TX/Team Hilton HHonors (Cypress)); Steven Legendre (Port Jefferson, NY/Team Hilton HHonors (University of Oklahoma)); and Alexander Naddour (Gilbert, AZ/Team Hilton HHonors (USA Youth Fitness Center)).

Photos of Orozco and Leyva from the trials
Leyva on the rings
Leyva on the rings
Leyva on the pommel horse
Orozco on the rings
Orozco on the pommel horse
Orozco and Leyva congratulating each other
On the women's gymnastics side, representing the US will be 2012 Olympics trials all-around champion Gabby Douglas (Virginia Beach, VA/Chow's Gymnastics and Dance), who'll be joined by McKayla Maroney (Long Beach, CA/AOGC); Alexandra Raisman (Needham, MA/Brestyan's American Gymnastics); Kyla Ross (Aliso Viejo, CA/Gym-Max); and Jordyn Wieber (DeWitt, MI/Gedderts' Twistars USA), plus three replacement athletes: Sarah Finnegan (St. Louis, MO/Great American Gymnastics Express); Anna Li (Aurora, IL/Legacy Elite Gymnastics); and Elizabeth Price (Coopersburg, PA/Parkettes). Douglas beat out Wieber 123.450 points to 123.350 to take the title and an automatic berth. 2008 Olympic all-around gold medalist Nastia Liukin vied for a spot but failed to make the team.

Douglas's and Wieber's close finish bodes well for their medal chances in London, and as with Orozco and Leyva, they should be at or near the top of the standings in the all around competition and leaders of a very strong US women's artistic gymnastics team.  Will Wieber avenge her trials loss? Will both women perform even better under the international spotlight? Will the US women outdo the male counterparts? I can't wait to see.

Gabby Douglas, on the uneven bars
The men's track and field competition sprints outcomes will no longer be a foregone conclusion, as some might have thought. At Jamaica's recent Olympic trials, 2008 100m and 200m gold medalist and world record holder in both events (9.58 in the 100m, 19.19 in the 200m), Jamaican Usain Bolt, lost both races to his training partner, Yohan Blake, and may be recovering from an injury, or at the very least trying to restrike his confidence and dominance, right up to the start of the prelims. After stunning Bolt in the 100m with a time of 9.75, Blake came right back and won the 200m in 19.83.

Meanwhile, the US's top sprinter of recent years, Tyson Gay, finished second in the US trials to Justin Gatlin, who won the 2004 Olympic gold medal in the 100m (and the bronze in the 200m), but was subsequently banned from competition for four years after testing positive in April 2006 for a proscribed substance. He returned in 2010, and won the 100m Olympic trial final in 9.80, the best time in history for a man over 30 years old. Whether he has it in him to best Gay again, as well as Blake and Bolt, and anyone else (the UK's, France's, and other countries' top racers will be raring to going as well), is for track fans to find out in a few weeks.

Photos of Bolt, Blake, Gay, and Gatlin

Blake after winning the 100m in 9.75
Gatlin outpacing the field to win the US Olympic trials
Blake defeats Bolt in 200m

Usain Bolt and Yohan Blake, Jamaican 100m & 200m champ
In the US women's 100m race, two runners finished tied for 3rd place: 200m star (and 2008 Beijing bronze medal winner in that race) Allyson Felix, and Jenebah Tarmoh, crossed the line at exactly the same time, in 11.86 seconds, as a high-speed camera even verified. Several options for deciding a winner, ranging from a tiebreaking run-off to more misogynistic suggestions, were bandied about, but in the end, Tarmoh chose the most sportspersonlike approach and gave her spot to Felix, choosing instead to accompany the team to London as a backup member. Felix will be aiming to score that elusive gold medal in the 200m, and to justify Tarmoh's decision in the 100m, so I won't be surprised if she runs the races of her life. Ready, set-->go!

Tarmoh at bottom, Felix above her, both tied at

In men's swimming, 2000 Olympic 50-meter freestyle gold medalist Anthony Ervin, who, it turns out, was the first person of (partial) African-American ancestry to win a swimming medal, decided, after prompting by his students, to return to the pool competitively and, at the age of 31, has made the team and will compete in his signature race at the 2012 London Olympics. He will be racing against another African American, Cullen Jones, of Irvington, New Jersey (just over the border from Newark), who gained great acclaim at the 2008 Beijing Olympics when he was part of the gold medal-winning 4x100m race. This is surely a first.

Anthony Ervin & Cullen Jones, at the US Olympic swimming trials
Lastly, the men's basketball team roster is set, and it will be chockfull of superstars and superstar-level egos, as has been the case since the 1992 Barcelona Olympics. This year's roster features the recent NBA Championship MVP LeBron James, of the Miami Heat, as well as several members of the runner-up Oklahoma City Thunder, among them NBA scoring whiz Kevin Durant, Russell Westbrook, and James Harden.  The oldest member of the team is LA Laker and 3-time Olympian Kobe Bryant. There are no weak links, and if they can play together as opposed to as a team of multimillionaires with dazzling skills and unmatched self-regard, they should win the gold medal with one hand tied behind half their backs. That is, if they can play together....

U.S. basketball Chairman Jerry Colangelo (R) and the 12 players selected for the 2012 U.S. Olympic men's basketball team pose during a news conference at the Wynn Las Vegas Resort in Las Vegas, Nevada July 7, 2012. Back row (L - R) Carmelo Anthony, Blake Griffin, Tyson Chandler, Kevin Love, Kevin Durant and LeBron James. Front row (L - R) Chris Paul, Russell Westbrook, Deron Williams, James Harden, Andre Iguodala and Kobe Bryant. REUTERS/Steve Marcus
Certainly there are so many more fascinating pairings and stories that will unfold in London, not least the frightening militarization of the city that the British government has undertaken to address terrorism fears, so I, like many others, will be staying tuned (and hoping that the only brouhaha involves scores and times, and nothing worse)!

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Jeremy Lin(sanity)!

Linsanity!



Jeremy Lin [林書豪], born in 1988 to parents from Taiwan.

–A graduate of Palo Alto High School, where he captained his team to a 32-1 record, winning the California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) Division II state title, yet he received no athletic scholarships, and was guaranteed a spot only on the squads of Harvard and Brown.

Lin, leading the Knicks
–AB, Economics, Harvard College (Go Crimson!), 2010, All-Ivy First Team in his junior and senior years, first Ivy Player ever to amass 1,450 points (1,483), 450 rebounds (487), 400 assists (406) and 200 steals (225), and undrafted by the National Basketball Association.

Jeremy Lin (The Canadian Press)
–2010-2011: Golden State Warriors and Reno Bighorns (D-League)

–2011-2012: Erie Bay Hawks and the New York Knicks

AND NOW:

with Lin in the game,

vs. New Jersey Nets, Knicks win 99-92, Lin scores 25 pts.
vs. Utah Jazz, Knicks win 99-88, Lin scores 28 pts.
vs. Washington Wizzards, Knicks win 107-93, Lin scores 23 pts.
vs. Los Angeles Lakers, Knicks win 92-85, Lin scores 38 pts.
vs. Minnesota Timberwolves, Knicks win 100-98, Lin scores 20 pts.
 
Year
Team
GP
GS
MPG
FG%
3P%
FT%
RPG
APG
SPG
BPG
PPG
13
3
16.1
.538
.200
.796
1.9
3.8
.8
.2
11.2

New York Times: "With 38 Points, the Legend Grows"


How long he can keep this up or whether he'll be allowed to continue starting once the Knicks' stars return, who knows, but what a great story, and after the lockout, it's just what the NBA needs.

Add caption

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Celtics Win + Willie Randolph Fired + Black French Love Obama

The Boston Celtics have won the NBA Championship in a blowout, 131-92, taking the series 4 games to 2. It's the franchise's 17th championship, and first in 22 years. Coached by Doc Rivers and led by longtime veteran Paul Pierce, the series MVP, and new acquisitions Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen, they outplayed and successfully defended the Los Angeles Lakers, whose overhyped star Kobe Bryant faltered at the end of the game's last two quarters.

The victorious team

MVP Paul Pierce, whose teammates made up for his weakest championship game

Kevin Garnett, one of the key people behind the Celtics' victory

The stats say it all.

Congratulations to the Celtics!

***

Willie RandolphAnd now for one of the hugest debacles of the baseball season: the New York Mets' firing of manager Willie Randolph.

What I wrote to Bernie and others was basically a summary of what everyone else has said, but I'll reprint it (with one change) anyways:

Really classy move, Mets. In the middle of the night, after sending the poor man out to California! Is it Randolph's fault that so many of his key players are aging and injured, or that the ones who're on the field are underplaying? Are the Mets that far out of first place? No. Do they have that poor of a record? No. Did he assemble all these overpaid has-beens (including Carlos Delgado, who is gorgeous but has the mobility of a grain silo)?

Bring back Willie and FIRE OMAR MINAYA!

***

On a different note, I posted Michael Kimmelman's New York Times article to the CC list:
"For Blacks in France, Obama's Rise Is Reason to Rejoice, and Hope." (Is it in the Arts section because Kimmelman's a well-known art critic?). Here's a snippet:

A new black consciousness is emerging in France, lately hastened by, of all things, the presumptive Democratic nominee for president of the United States. An article in Le Monde a few days ago described how Mr. Obama is “stirring up high hopes” among blacks here. Even seeing the word “noir” (“black”) in a French newspaper was an occasion for surprise until recently.

Meanwhile, this past weekend, 60 cars were burned and some 50 young people scuffled with police and firemen, injuring several of them, in a poor minority suburb of Vitry-le-François, in the Marne region of northeast France.

Americans, who have debated race relations since the dawn of the Republic, may find it hard to grasp the degree to which race, like religion, remains a taboo topic in France. While Mr. Obama talks about running a campaign transcending race, an increasing number of French blacks are pushing for, in effect, the reverse.

(Even the failed Socialist presidential candidate, Segolène Royal, is a fan; she even attended one of his speeches in Boston.) The excitement and enthusiasm goes far beyond France....

Monday, June 02, 2008

Tuesday Dribbles

This is my 900th post! Not that that's particularly important, but I decided to look at Blogger's stats before starting this entry, and that's what it says, so I thought why not mention it?

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Today was my final lecture of the quarter, and the last day of spring classes. Reading week starts tomorrow, and exams begin next Monday. I started off telling my class that I couldn't believe we had reached the end of the term, because the end of March and the first class are still vivid in my mind--so great was my anxiety about this class that I have experienced sciatica on the left side of my body, which culminated in almost paralyzing hip pain a month ago, and aoregeiria, or waking up too early every morning--and because we'd covered so much ground. But this was it, and after a few comments about the final exam, I spoke about Junot Díaz's The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, the last book on the syllabus, and attempted to show how it broached all of the many thematic and formal concerns we had been discussing from modernist and Modernist moment forward to post-modernism, which we had focused on beginning with Donald Barthelme's "The Glass Mountain," reading backwards to Nathanaël West and Robert Lowell. (It helps, of course, that Díaz, with his limitless gifts for irony, invokes one of the central figures of Anglo-American pre-modernism and the exemplar of Aestheticism in the novel's title.) In order to leave them with some fairly current scholarship, I briefly touched upon Édouard Glissant's poetics of relation and the concept of "opacity," citing both the novel's poetic epigram from Derek Walcott's "The Schooner Flight" and the untitled prologue, as a way of thinking through the play of modes, genres, idioms, linguistic registers, languages, and language itself in the book, and also as a means of situating it within the context not only of American literatures, but also Caribbean, Latin American and African Diasporic literatures. Its Carnivalesque richness and capacity for creolizing and archipelagoizing American literature is something I'm sure someone will take up, if this hasn't occurred yet, but its many other concerns link it to everything we had read before. As I reread it last week, I could hear the echoes of Hughes and so many others--and I hope the students heard them as well.

And so the quarter is over...almost. I have another exam to give, another thesis to read, meetings, and much to wrap up before I head home and get some rest and back to my own work, but I can say that despite the amount of work, the class was pleasurable beyond belief, and working with the brilliant TAs, from English and African American Studies, and the many dozens of students, has been worth it.

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Recently, for a forthcoming art book a friend is publishing, I translated a very short prose introduction by the distinguished French poet Yves Bonnefoy, who had been one of my friend's teachers in graduate school, and whom I had the honor of meeting, briefly, some years ago when he read in New York. ("Je te nommerai désert/nuit ta voix, desolé ta visage....") Its difficulty surprised me; my French muscle, at least in terms of speaking and writing, is still functioning, but after so much Spanish (and somewhat less Portuguese), I did struggle with Bonnefoy's elliptical, elusive syntax, which demanded something beyond the adequatio approach to translation that has long been decried. I realized that most of the French texts I've translated, nearly all prose fiction except for Alain Mabanckou's poems, are far more straightforward, and even when infused with a great deal of figuration and idiomatic language, especially prose, they are not trying to express something ineffable, which is, of course, one of the aims of Bonnefoy's poetry in general. The piece, however, is done, and my friend is happy, but I do keep thinking, I could spend weeks on those two paragraphs, if I had the time...

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So long to Yves Saint Laurent and Bo Diddley, who recently passed away.

C and I particularly love David Teboul's 2002 cinema verité documentary on Saint-Laurent 5 avenue Marceau 75116 Paris, which shows him in his couture rooms, examining and working on new outfits. Catherine Deneuve and LouLou de la Falaise, along with Saint Laurent's longtime partner and business associate Pierre Berger all make appearances. To hear Saint Laurent whisper repeatedly and raspily with utter delight "ravissante" as several the models brings life to his art is worth the entire documentary.'

Mississippi native and Chicago product Diddley, one of the creators of the global music now known as Rock & Roll, should be best remembered aurally, I think. So here're some clips to check out. Start with the eponymous "Bo Diddley," and then check out "I'm a Man," "Who Do You Love," "Pretty Thang," "I'm Looking for a Woman," and "Diddley Daddy" if you don't know his work, though its echoes run like tributaries throughout so much subsequent rock.

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Bernie asked whether I and others were going to root for these people
Kobe Bryant passes to Pau Gasol of the Los Angeles Lakers. The Lakers defeated the defending champion San Antonio Spurs 100-92, advancing to the National Basketball Association finals for the first time in four years.
Kobe Bryant, #24, passes to Pau Gasol, #14 (AFP/Getty Images/Stephen Dunn)
Los Angeles Lakers' Kobe Bryant smiles during a practice day in Los Angeles on Sunday, June 1, 2008. The Lakers face the Boston Celtics in the NBA basketball finals starting Thursday.
Kobe [Narcissus] Bryant (AP Photo/Hector Mata)

or these:
AUBURN HILLS, MI - MAY 30: Kevin Garnett #5 talks with Kendrick Perkins #43 of the Boston Celtics during a game against the Detroit Pistons in Game Six of the Eastern Conference Finals during the 2008 NBA Playoffs at the Palace of Auburn Hills on May 30, 2008 in Auburn Hills, Michigan.  NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and/or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement.  Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2008 NBAE (Photo by D. Lippitt/Einstein/NBAE via Getty Images)
Kevin Garnett and Kendrick Perkins (Photo by D. Lippitt/Einstein/NBAE via Getty Images)
Boston Celtics guard Ray Allen (20) shoots three's after practice at the team's basketball facility in Boston, Mass., Monday afternoon, June 2, 2008. The Celtics will meet the Los Angeles Lakes in the NBA championship series beginning Thursday, June 5, 2008 in Boston.
Ray Allen practicing 3-point shots recently (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia)

in the championship matchup that is inducing spontaneous orgasms in TV sportscasters?

Although I gave up (on) the NBA after the last lockout/strike nonsense, I've decided to choose and root for the latter, something that I, having lived in Boston and witnessed Celtic fans up close never thought I'd do, but then again, I never thought Kevin Garnett and Ray Allen would be playing for the Celtics, so there's always a new day for everything.