|
Baseball and Gay Fans Come Together
Local groups and individuals spearhead a new trend at
baseball parks
Outsports.com
Professional
athletes from John Rocker in 2000 to John Smoltz in 2004 have made
it clear that openly gay players in Major League Baseball would
receive a harsh reception from some prospective teammates. The
resistance of the WNBA’s New York Liberty, which many assume has a
large lesbian fan base, to formally recognize their gay fans
received plenty of attention and a kiss-in at one of the games.
Despite all of
this, a number of baseball teams have been welcoming efforts by
their gay fans in the last couple years to create gay-themed events
at their ballparks. Just as it did with Jackie Robinson over 50
years ago, Major League Baseball, it seems, is leading the way in
reaching out to a minority group – this time, baseball fans who
happen to be gay.
In the last
three years, no less than a dozen baseball teams have hosted or
participated in “gay days” at one of their home games. This year
will mark the most gay-themed outings at baseball stadiums in any
given season. The Toronto Blue Jays hosted
Pride Community Day on June 24. The Philadelphia Phillies (Aug.
9), Oakland A’s (Aug. 14),
Chicago Cubs (Aug. 15) and Boston Red Sox (Aug. 16) will all
have their “gay day” within a week of one another. There will also
be an event for gay fans during a Mets game at Shea Stadium Sept.
13.
Maybe the most
progressive event of the year will be the
San Francisco Giants’ LGBT Singles Night OUT on Sept. 1. The
event is an offshoot of the Giants’ regular singles night that
targets straight bachelors and bachelorettes. The LGBT evening’s
festivities will start in the Centerfield Scoreboard Plaza with a
pregame mixer at 5:15 p.m. The $32 tickets to the event will include
admission to the party, two drinks and a seat in the exclusive LGBT
Singles Night OUT Lower Box section.
The
longest-running event is believed to be the “gay day” at the Chicago
Cubs. The event launched in 2001 and was accompanied that year by
the first-ever advertisement by a Major League Baseball team in a
gay newspaper, the Chicago Free Press. The 2002 and 2003 events both
attracted about 2,000 gay fans to the event. The Free Press is now a
lead sponsor of the event and they are hoping to attract even more
in the fourth gay day at the Cubs later this month.
“Every year it
keeps getting bigger and bigger,” said event founder and Chicago
Free Press senior advertising representative Bill Gubrud. “Everybody
who goes makes a difference. We’re community and we’re proving that
we can pack the ballpark if we want to.”
Other teams that
have held gay-themed events include the Atlanta Braves, Los Angeles
Dodgers, Minnesota Twins, Pittsburgh Pirates and Texas Rangers.
Other teams, like the Florida Marlins, Baltimore Orioles, Chicago
White Sox, and San Francisco Giants, have held HIV-awareness events
at past home games.
It’s no
coincidence that more “gay days” are popping up at baseball games as
gay people become more active in civil-rights debates. The increase
in the number of these events is due mostly to the active role gay
fans have taken in persuading their local team to support an event
at their ballpark.
“This is not a
matter of the teams doing this on their own,” said Larry Felzer,
organizer of the
Phillie’s Gay Community Day. “I don’t know of a team being
approached to do this that has said no. With the exception of
Toronto, this is an outside group that is doing something at the
ballpark.”
Despite the
Toronto Blue Jays’ control of the event (i.e., internally organized)
which is unique to these “gay days,” the event was originally
inspired by Outsports.com member Mark Kari, founder of
Gaybaseballdays.com. A longtime Blue Jays fan, Mark was prodded
by Felzer’s success with the Phillies’ 2003 event (with nearly 750
attendees) and approached the Blue Jays in October 2003 to host an
event there. Kari said he was later pushed out of the process and
replaced by the family member of a Blue Jays employee. Despite that, Kari continued to volunteer to
build the Toronto event.
Some of these gay
days have drawn protests from local groups and individuals. The
Texas Rangers event in 2003 was overshadowed by an outpouring of
local people who saw the embracing of gay fans by the team as
embracing sin. The Philadelphia Phillies received a mountain of
negative response from people all over the country when news of the
event hit national Christian Web sites and e-mail lists.
Despite the
protests, though, the local groups and teams continue to build
relationships that bridge the narrowing gap between sports and their
gay fans.
“They’re
treating us the same as they would treat any other organization or
group of people in this partnership program and that’s all I would
ask for,” Felzer said.
August 3, 2004 |