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Covert
Homophobia Keeping Closet Doors Locked
By
Cyd Zeigler Jr.
Outsports.com
Recent strides have given
hope that some in high places want the negative
attitudes toward gays in sports to change: Stanford held
a homophobia training program for varsity coaches last
year; Harvard held a
panel discussion
including openly gay varsity athletes last spring; the
NCAA hosted a discussion on homosexuality at their
conference in January.
As many are frowning more
and more on overt homophobia, it is the covert acts of
many more that continue to keep gay athletes in the
closet.
Two relevant events on
swim teams at two very different colleges slipped under
the radar recently, yet are indicative of the tacit
homophobic attitude that keeps the closet doors of
sports locked for so many.
Dave Lohse is an openly
gay Associate Athletic Communications Director at the
University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill. Two years
ago, Dave sent out Christmas cards with a picture of
himself and the women's soccer team - ACC champions that
year. Some of the members of the men's swim team saw the
cards and asked him when they'd get to be on his
Christmas card.
That
opportunity came this past December, with the blessing
of the team's head swimming coach, Frank Comfort. One
day after practice, Dave, whom the entire team knows is
gay, got a picture taken of himself, wearing a Santa
hat, with some of the swimmers who wanted to be in the
picture (left). For the caption, Lohse took an idea from
one of the swimmers and wrote, "Hope your Xmas packages
are as festive as mine!"
"Frank Comfort thought it
was an exercise in diversity," Lohse says. "The swimmers
loved the card and every single one of them wanted a
copy of the cards with the 'package' message."
Two weeks later, Dave's
boss told him that the cards were inappropriate, that
the school's sexual harassment officer was looking into
it, and that he could never send out a card with any UNC
athlete on it.
"The whole thing turned
something that was supposed to be a lot of fun and put a
negative edge on it," Lohse says.
No doubt, intent is hard
to discern - and no one is going to admit today that
homophobia played a role. But, the facts are clear: a
gay man took a picture with the women's soccer team and
nothing was said; when that same gay man took a picture
with the men's swim team, he was told he could never do
it again and a sexual harassment officer was brought in
to investigate.
The athletic department
used their fear of NCAA sanctions (the notion being that
the players might be viewed as having endorsed
something) as reasoning. Swim coach Frank Comfort thinks
there is more to it than that: "I've got to believe
subconsciously that the fact Dave is gay affected the
administrative reaction. Just maybe not consciously."
Kalamazoo College is a
liberal arts college in Kalamazoo, Michigan, with an
enrollment of about 1,400 undergraduate students. When
you visit the
Kalamazoo
College Web site, their headlining motto reads:
"Enlightened Leadership: Kalamazoo College in the 21st
Century."
Outsports recently
received a request from Brian Miller, the Web master of
the
Kalamazoo College swimming page. Many months ago, we
created a link to a photograph on their Web site of two
swimmers flexing in their towel and Speedo in the locker
room. Miller said in his e-mail that one of their alumni
is "linked to from your page and they're a little bent
out of shape about it. Could you remove the link?"
When I clicked on the
link, I was taken to a page with a demonic figure
telling me that I should not be looking at that picture
and that my entire "subnet" had been blocked; the Web
master had gone ahead and blocked all of Outsports from
looking at the picture.
We declined his request
to remove the link.
We soon got an e-mail
from Miller saying that, since we won't remove the link,
he would remove the photograph from the Internet
entirely - he needed to protect the wishes of the
athlete. While he removed that photo, he left up the
dozens of other photos of swimmers hamming it up for the
camera in their Speedos. In trying to understand why one
of the swimmers objected to us simply linking to a page
on which was a photograph of him (mind you, we weren't
"stealing" the photo, but simply linking to a page with
it), we asked to speak, via e-mail or telephone, with
him.
The swimmer has failed to
respond.
As far as I can tell, he
can have one of two reasons for wanting the link
removed. First, he may himself be gay and is afraid
that, being mentioned on a gay sports Web site, the
"wrong" person stumbling across it may out him to
friends and family.
This reason, though, is
flawed. We have links on the site to pictures and
stories of Brett Favre, Drew Bledsoe, Shaquille O'Neal
and hundreds of other athletes. While there may be some
wishful thinking about some of them, I'd be hard-pressed
to find anyone claiming any of these three athletes, in
particular, are gay; no athlete should feel his
sexuality is questioned by a simple mention or link on
our site.
The other possible reason
I can think of is more probable and a bit more
disturbing. It's not just homophobia. Homophobia, much
of the time, means that you don't want to spend time
with gay people, or you probably think their lifestyle
isn't right. This swimmer has taken it even further: he
doesn't even want gay people looking at him. Would he
mind a women's sports site linking to his photo? I
suppose that, if a gay man were to see him coming at you
on the street, he'd prefer that you close your eyes
instead of smiling and wishing him a good day.
When asked several
questions about the attitude toward homosexuality on the
Kalamazoo swim team, Brian Miller emphasized that there
was no homophobia on the team. However, when asked "Has
the team, or the coaches, had open conversations with
the rest of the team about homosexuality," he said,
simply, "no."
And therein lies the
problem. This covert homophobia is allowed to sit
unsettled within athletes, coaches, and on teams with no
recourse because so few people are challenging athletic
departments and sports teams to actually talk about
homosexuality. If sports is the last closet, the reason
behind it is the people with the keys: the coaches,
athletic directors and athletes who simply don't want to
talk about the issue.
Years ago, in high
school, I was that gay kid that other kids teased. All
through junior high school, "jocks" harassed me daily
about being gay - though I didn't even know at the time
that I was. In high school, I excelled in athletics,
setting school records in track, posting an undefeated
record in the hurdles, and winning the school's
sportsman of the year award my senior year. As victories
came in, the name calling subsided. I learned that
sports helped me hide from the homophobia; but not from
my own homosexuality.
Many boys try to bury
their feelings for other boys in sports - be it
football, basketball, track, or swimming. Most of them
are met by their coaches and teammates with more
homophobia than in society in general; and, despite
their hopes, those feelings don't go away. They dive
deeper into the closet thanks to attitudes like these.
The NCAA is trying to
make strides. They held an hour long panel discussion at
their 2002 convention earlier in January. The panel
included openly gay Oberlin College Athletic Director,
Mike Muska. He said that as many as 90 percent of the
coming out stories he has heard in college athletics are
mishandled by coaches or fellow athletes. "We can't say,
'Oh, we don't have a problem here'," Muska told those in
attendance. "Because we do."
Until the coaches and
student captains begin to take notice of what's
happening and decide that even covert homophobia isn't
OK, stories like the above will continue to happen
The motto emblazoned on
Kalamazoo College's Web site is, "Enlightened
Leadership." As long as administrators, coaches and
athletes continue to view these covert events as
enlightened, the closet doors of the sports world will
remain locked.
February 24, 2002
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