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NBA center Jason Collins gets candid at Keck School

Keck School of Medicine Dean Carmen A. Puliafito interviews Jason Collins on his coming out as an openly gay athlete. (USC Photo/Steve Cohn)

When NBA center Jason Collins came out as a gay man on the cover of Sports Illustrated, he became a cultural icon — the first openly gay athlete playing a major American team sport.

“I am definitely not alone,” Collins said. “Statistically speaking, there are [gay athletes] in all sports.”

In a wide-ranging discussion with Keck School of Medicine of USC Dean Carmen A. Puliafito, Collins discussed his coming out process, a phone call with President Barack Obama, being a role model and his future in the NBA.

Much of the free-form discussion, as part of the 2013-14 Dean’s Distinguished Lecturer series held on Sept. 12 in Mayer Auditorium on the Health Sciences Campus, circled around the idea of stereotypes — of athletes, of African- Americans and of homosexuality.

“As physicians, we know that stereotyping is a very dangerous thing that can interfere with taking care of patients and ensuring their quality of care,” Puliafito said.

According to Collins, the fact that he is a gay male made him play a more physical style of basketball to fight certain stereotypes associated with gay men.

“As an athlete, you’re taught what it means to be a ‘tough guy,’ ” he said. “Being gay is considered to be the other side of the spectrum. People associate the worst stereotypes with being gay. … I always had a chip on my shoulder, and it was one of those things that just made me play harder.”

Collins ended the talk by answering a question from the audience about his toughest competitors, turning his answer into a message about competing in the “right” way and about the value of positive behavior, both on and off the court.

“I’m all for being physical and playing hard, but you should never cross the line as far as how you conduct yourself on the court, in terms of what you say and what you do — you should never try to injure a player,” he said. “One thing my grandmother taught me and my brother at a very early age: Your reputation will go places you will never go.”

An archived webcast of the discussion can be viewed at http://keckmedia.usc.edu/Mediasite/Catalog/catalogs/ddls

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NBA center Jason Collins gets candid at Keck School

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