Gay, Closeted and in
the NFL
In a New Book, an Anonymous Player
Describes Life as an Outsider
By Jim
Buzinski
Outsports.com
“Steven Thompson” is
paid big bucks to be a tough NFL player, but many times he feels
powerless.
"I’m not brave,” Thompson said. “I’m gutless, really.”
Thompson is a
pseudonym for an active NFL player who is gay. New York Times reporter
Mike Freeman tells his story in a chapter of a new book,
"Bloody Sundays."
The book offers
an interesting insider’s account of the NFL written by Freeman, a man
with 15 years experience in covering pro football. There are profiles
of Jon Gruden and Emmitt Smith, along with fascinating details of
spying within the league and other topics. But the section on Thompson
is groundbreaking and offers the first time an active NFL player has
spoken at length about his homosexuality.
In Freeman’s account,
Thompson comes across as a troubled but articulate soul. He speaks of
depression and sleeplessness as he wrestles with being a closeted gay
man in a homophobic atmosphere. The quote about feeling “gutless”
refers to an incident in a San Francisco restaurant where Thompson sat
silently as teammates, including a backup quarterback, made
increasingly loud and offensive anti-gay comments.
“Why do those
motherfuckers have to hold hands in public?” Thompson said one
teammate asked, referring to a couple at another table.
“We are in
Fagville,” replied the quarterback.
As Freeman writes,
“Thompson says he remained quiet as the slurs were spewed. Suddenly,
that sickening feeling in his stomach, eerily familiar, was back, the
one that made him feel like a coward for not speaking up and telling
his friends he was gay and to close their mouths.”
But Thompson has made
a choice to stay quiet—he fears his NFL career would be over, as would
any chance of staying in the sport as a coach or in management. It’s a
tradeoff gay jocks in pro sports make all of the time. To date, not a
single pro baseball, football, basketball or hockey player has come
out while still playing (and the number who have come out after
retiring couldn’t fill a starting 11 in football).
In an interview with
Outsports, Freeman described Thompson as “bright and very well-read. …
He’s smart and he’s got a prickly kind of temperament. He doesn’t
suffer dumb questions.” He also described the player as paranoid about
being discovered, though he regularly frequents gay bars and has had
regular relationships with other men, including another player.
Getting Thompson to
open up about being gay, even anonymously, was a lengthy process that
took a couple of years, Freeman said. The two first met while they
were going through volunteer training for an organization that works
with gay people, among others. Neither knew of the other and over time
Thompson began confiding in the reporter. “He was always sort of
complaining about how gays are viewed in general,” Freeman said. “He
was really angry and passionate about it.” He finally agreed to let
his story be told.
Thompson believed
that by coming forward, it might make it easier for other gay players
by raising the issue. He made Freeman sign a contract prohibiting him
from revealing his identity. I found it impossible to even guess at
Thompson’s real name, his ethnicity or his position. Freeman tells us
he is not a superstar but would be familiar to NFL fans, and is likely
not a rookie or second-year player. He’s also likely not a San
Francisco 49ers, since the dinner incident described above came on a
team road trip. And he’s certainly not a Cincinnati Bengal (at the
time of the writing, at least), since one passage discusses Thompson’s
team “making a playoff push.”
The chapter on
Thompson is full of contradictions, and that’s not meant as a
criticism. When it comes to gays in sports, it seems as if the glass
is half-full one day, half-empty the next. Examples:
--On one page,
Freeman states that if a player came out publicly “any such
pronouncement would finish the player in football.” But two pages
later, we read of an annual survey taken of highly rated NFL rookies
by agent Ralph Cindrich. In the survey, 76.4% “would be comfortable
playing football next to a gay teammate, and 58.1% said they would be
comfortable having a gay teammate use the locker next to theirs.”
However, 50% said they “had no problem calling gay men ‘faggots’ or
similar derogatory names.”
--Freeman recounts
how one NFC team passed on “a damn good player” in free agency after
discovering he was gay. That team’s coach said, “Call me prejudiced or
whatever, but I have to look out for the morale of the team, and a
known gay player could destroy that.” However, two paragraphs later,
we hear from an NFC general manager who “said the presence of gay
players would not be a controversial issue to today’s NFL players
because this generation is more open-minded than previous ones.”
Thompson, though, is
not taking any chances. He regularly dates women as a cover and has no
desire to come out publicly. His fear of being found out, though,
hasn’t prevented Thompson from going to gay bars and all-gay parties
and having relationships. The most interesting was his long-distance
affair with a fellow gay NFL player he met in a bar on the East Coast.
“It was very intense
and very weird because we rarely saw each other,” Thompson says in the
book. “We communicated through the Internet because he didn’t want me
to call him. I thought it was because he was overly paranoid. A lot of
guys in the league, gay and straight, get paranoid on the telephone
because they think the NFL monitors your calls.”
The real reason for
the player’s paranoia, Thompson says, was that he was married to a
woman. The two men’s relationship soon was over. “In a strange way I
felt better after that relationship,” Thompson says, “because I had
met someone who was more confused than I was.”
The most
controversial aspect of the Thompson chapter is likely to be his
contention that between 100 and 200 players in the NFL are gay. He
told Freeman he based his estimate on how many gay athletes he
regularly sees when going out. With 1,696 players in the league, 10%
would be 170, so Thompson’s numbers might have some validity. But
Freeman disputes this figure, saying his “journalistic arrogance”
makes him certain he would have heard if there were so many gay
players.
After attending an
all-gay party with Thompson and seeing a couple of other NFL players,
Freeman acknowledges that his skepticism about the numbers may be
softening. He now says, “I don’t know how many there are. It’s more
than I originally thought but less than he thinks.”
Ultimately, though,
no one really knows and the numbers are irrelevant. We’re dealing with
people, not statistics; whether there are 2, 20 or 200 gay NFL players
should not matter in how they are treated or perceived.
Thompson is to be
applauded for telling his story and opening a window into a part of
sports many would just as soon keep closed. But one gets a feeling of
sadness when hearing that he intends to stay closeted until he dies,
and we can only hope he finds a measure of inner peace. Thompson
explains his rationale simply:
“Basically, it comes
down to, I love playing football more than I love myself and my sense
of pride and well-being. … I know keeping this secret is eating me up
inside. But right now I don’t care. I love this game so much I won’t
do anything to jeopardize it.”
Mike Freeman can be contacted
via e-mail
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Oct. 2, 2003 |