Sports
The road to Kona
D.C. athlete makes Ironman cut

Bryan Frank in action. (Photo by Jay Frank)
It is the middle of the night and triathlete Bryan Frank wakes up to the sound of hissing in his bedroom. Earlier that day he had changed the front tubes on both his road bike and his time-trial bike and one of them had started to go flat.
“When I realized what it was, I was like, ‘What the hell?’ I didn’t even get to ride on that tube,” Frank says. “And despite what people say, I don’t sleep with my bikes, they were just in my bedroom.”
Later that day, when he was 30 miles into his bike ride, the second bike went flat as well. Two flat tires in one day.
The bikes are lucky to find a spot among Frank’s gear as his apartment looks like multiple athletes are in residence with bikes, running shoes, cycling shoes, sports clothing, bibs and caps scattered throughout the place. His favorite running shoe by Mizuno has been discontinued and he has been buying them up on the internet and stashing them in his closet.
They are all necessities on the road that leads to his plans on Oct. 10. Frank will be living the dream that all triathletes dream; he will be competing in the 2015 Ironman World Championships in Kona, Hawaii.
After racing in qualifying Ironman events in Lake Placid in 2011 and Austria in 2013, Frank made the cut at the Chattanooga Ironman in Sept., 2014.
“Kona is the pinnacle of triathlon races and two years ago I never thought I would qualify,” said Frank shortly after the Chattanooga race.
In a race that turned up a dead body in the Tennessee River during the swim and a vandal who tossed oil and tacks on the course during the bike, Frank hung tough during the run to finish between a Russian athlete and a Danish athlete to clinch the fourth place spot.
Shortly after finishing, he headed to the recovery tent and was told that he had qualified for Kona. He scrambled to find his parents who had been cheering him on from the sidelines.
“My body started breaking down during the run and I began to feel my Kona dreams fading,” Frank says. “When I found my parents after the race, I was glad for the rain that was hiding my tears of joy.”
His final time was 9:36:17.
Frank, who works in biological research, is sponsored by Rose Physical Therapy and the Snapple Triathlon Elite Team. He is a Dallas native, has lived in the D.C. area since 2001, is the treasurer of D.C. Triathlon Club and is a member of its LGBT offshoot, TriOUT.
His life for the past 12 months has been pointed directly at the Kona race in two weeks.
Starting back in the early spring, he began a 17-week build with his training peaking at 18 hours per week and ending with a three week taper going into a race alongside his teammates in the Mont-Tremblant Ironman. That race was just last month.
Following that he did a short recovery training period, went back into a build and will taper to peak at the right time.
“My speed on the bike is good, my run pace is good and I feel good in the water,” Frank says.
The Kona course will be standard Ironman fare, a 2.4-mile swim, a 112-mile bike and a 26.2-mile run. However, there will be 45 mph crosswinds, 95 degree temperatures, no shade and an unforgiving course. A little over 2,000 triathletes qualified for the race and roughly 200 more are brought in through a lottery. Ten percent of the athletes will not finish the race.
“It’s definitely not a race where I will be looking for a best time,” Frank says. “I want my friends to cheer me on at the finish line, not from the medical tent.”
In a nod to his sexuality, Frank will be bringing a pride flag to Kona and is planning to have a friend hand it to him when he is a half-mile from his run to the finish line.
“It is all starting to get real and I am really getting nervous. The world championships are a big stage for me to be playing on,” he says. “All the sacrifices have paid off. I have wanted this for a long time.”
The event will be streaming live on Universal Sports on Oct. 10 and the D.C. Triathlon Club will host a Kona viewing party on Nov. 14.
The Baltimore Orioles will take on the Washington Nationals on Friday, June 26 at 7 p.m. for Pride Night at Oriole Park.
The first 15,000 fans will receive an exclusive Pride Night Orioles jersey. The Washington Blade is a media sponsor of this event.
To purchase tickets, visit Orioles.com/Tickets.
Sports
Minor league team in York, Pa., forfeits Pride Night game after some players refuse to wear special jersey
City is roughly 20 miles north of Md. border
An independent minor league baseball team says it is forfeiting a game because some of its players refused to wear a special Pride Night jersey.
The Atlantic League Pro Baseball’s York Revolution were planning to hold their 11th annual Pride Night event Thursday for a game against the Southern Maryland Blue Crabs.
But the Revolution announced the day of the game that it wouldn’t be played. York is about 20 miles north of the Maryland line. The Blue Crabs play in Waldorf.
The rest of this article can be found on the Baltimore Banner’s website.
Sports
Jason Collins dies at 47
First openly gay man to actively play for major sports team battled brain cancer
Jason Collins, the first openly gay man to actively play for a major professional sports team, died on Tuesday after a battle with brain cancer. He was 47.
The California native had briefly played for the Washington Wizards in 2013 before coming out in a Sports Illustrated op-ed.
Collins in 2014 became the first openly gay man to play in a game for a major American professional sports league when he played 11 minutes during a Brooklyn Nets game. He wore jersey number 98 in honor of Matthew Shepard, a gay college student murdered outside of Laramie, Wyo., in 1998.
Collins told the Washington Blade in 2014 that his life was “exponentially better” since he came out. Collins the same year retired from the National Basketball Association after 13 seasons.
Collins married his husband, Brunson Green, in May 2025.
The NBA last September announced Collins had begun treatment for a brain tumor. Collins on Dec. 11, 2025, announced he had Stage 4 glioblastoma.
“We are heartbroken to share that Jason Collins, our beloved husband, son, brother and uncle, has died after a valiant fight with glioblastoma,” said Collins’s family in a statement the NBA released. “Jason changed lives in unexpected ways and was an inspiration to all who knew him and to those who admired him from afar. We are grateful for the outpouring of love and prayers over the past eight months and for the exceptional medical care Jason received from his doctors and nurses. Our family will miss him dearly.”
NBA Commissioner Adam Silver said Collins’s “impact and influence extended far beyond basketball as he helped make the NBA, WNBA, and larger sports community more inclusive and welcoming for future generations.”
“He exemplified outstanding leadership and professionalism throughout his 13-year NBA career and in his dedicated work as an NBA Cares Ambassador,” said Silver. “Jason will be remembered not only for breaking barriers, but also for the kindness and humanity that defined his life and touched so many others.”
“To call Jason Collins a groundbreaking figure for our community is simply inadequate. We truly lost a giant today,” added Human Rights Campaign President Kelley Robinson in a statement. “He came out as gay — while still playing — at a time when men’s athletes simply did not do that. But as he powerfully demonstrated in his final years in the league and his post-NBA career, stepping forward as he did boldly changed the conversation.”
“He was and will always be a legend for the LGBTQ+ community, and we are heartbroken to hear of his passing at the young age of 47,” she said. “Our hearts go out to his family and loved ones. We will keep fighting on in his honor until the day everyone can be who they are on their terms.”
