Kye Allums

Former

Birthday October 23, 1989

Birth Sign Scorpio

Birthplace Daytona Beach, Florida, United States

Age 34 years old

Nationality United States

#43101 Most Popular

1989

Kye Allums (born October 23, 1989) is a former college basketball player for the George Washington University women's team who in 2010 came out as a trans man, becoming the first openly transgender NCAA Division I college athlete.

Allums is a transgender advocate, public speaker, artist, and mentor to LGBT youth.

Allums graduated from Centennial High School in Circle Pines, Minnesota, United States.

He played three seasons as a guard on the women's basketball team at George Washington University, the George Washington Colonials.

Allums's teammates called him "Kay-Kay".

Allums began telling people to call him "Kye".

2010

He came out as a trans man in 2010.

He told sports website Outsports, "my biological sex is female, which makes me a transgender male."

2011

In May 2011, GWU announced that Allums had decided to leave the GWU basketball team.

He graduated from George Washington University in 2011 with a bachelor's degree in Fine Arts.

2014

In 2014, in an interview with ESPN, Allums said that he had attempted suicide.

Allums began traveling around the country to talk about life as a transgender person.

He visits high schools, colleges and universities to discuss the transgender community and how it is possible to be transgender and play on a team.

He gives advice on confronting bullies when being trans.

He starred in Laverne Cox's documentary The T Word. The film follows young transgender individuals and explains what they go through.

Allums produced a project called "I Am Enough", which encourages other LGBTQ individuals to come out and talk about their experiences.

The project allows individuals to submit their stories, thereby showing people who share the same issues that they are not alone.

2015

In 2015, he was inducted into the National Gay and Lesbian Sports Hall of Fame.

Allums published a book called Who Am I?, which features poems and letters he wrote about his parents and himself.