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An NBA team reached out to me last season wondering if I'd participate in a panel discussion addressing homophobia in sports. The audience would be the team's staff. I thought: "Wow. Are we still doing this?"
I've been on panels of this nature for nearly 20 years. I've spoken to NBA players, MLB staff, NFL owners and NHL fans. I consider it one of the perks of having the audacity to say LeBron is the king and Beyonce is my queen without changing audiences.
"I will do it if a player participates," I wrote in response. "I've done plenty of these panel discussions hosted by sports franchises without player buy-in."
A player wasn't available.
And so, neither was I.
I didn't set out to write about homophobia in sports. My dream job was being a beat reporter covering the Detroit Pistons. In college I covered the men's basketball team for the student newspaper. My first big "get" for the Western Herald was Grant Hill his rookie year. I wanted to be like Mitch Albom. Maybe replace the great George Blaha whenever the team's play-by-play legend decided to retire.