During the 2002 draft, no NBA team selected Collins, who was then allowed to sign for any team as an unrestricted free agent. Despite having participated in the
Toronto Raptors preseason camp, he did not receive any offers from the Raptors or any NBA team, and he decided to start his professional career in Europe. His first professional club was
Istanbul-based
Darüşşafaka S.K., and he played 1 game in the
2002–03 ULEB Cup: in 14 minutes of play he scored both of his field goals, scoring 4 points and recording 3 rebounds. Collins briefly played for several teams and struggled to find stability: in January 2004 he signed for Central Entrerriano, in the Argentine
Liga Nacional de Básquet, as a temporary replacement for Anthony Bishop, and played only 4 games there, averaging 20.5 points, 12.8 rebounds and 2.5 blocks. At the beginning of 2005 he signed for Yunnan Honghe in the
Chinese CBL, where he played 16 games with drastically improved averages of 28.9 points and 16.6 rebounds. After a brief experience at Grises de Humacao in
Puerto Rico, Collins came back to Europe and in July 2005 he signed for Italian club Roseto, but during his three months there he only played 4 games, averaging 3.8 points and 6.3 rebounds in 15 minutes of play. The Italian team released him on October 22, 2005, following to several disciplinary issues, among which an argument with teammate
Jack Michael Martínez that almost escalated in a fight. After Italy, Collins decided to play for the
Dodge City Legend in the
USBL, appearing in 13 games. After two short stints in
Saudi Arabia and in the American WCBL, Collins found a relatively stable role as a starter in
South Korea, where he joined the
Seoul SK Knights for 33 games, averaging 11.6 points and 10.3 rebounds. In January 2010 he came back to China, signing for the
Jilin Northeast Tigers, where he appeared in 14 games. He played again in Puerto Rico and Venezuela and in 2011 he signed for Shenyang Dongjin, posting averages of 23.1 points and 12.5 rebounds in 19 games. == Notes ==