|
A Gay Gymnast is Champion Again
Graham Ackerman wins back-to-back national championships
By
Cyd Zeigler jr.
Openly gay
collegiate gymnast Graham Ackerman won the national championship in
the floor exercise at the 2005 Men’s Collegiate Gymnastics
Championships at West Point, N.Y.. Six different gymnasts in all
were crowned national champions in the six events: floor exercise,
pommel horse, rings, vault, horizontal bar and parallel bars.
While Ackerman was
thrilled that his 9.600 edged out the 9.587 posted by Iowa’s
Michael McNamara, he rolled his eyes about his performance after
the meet.
“I was surprised I
won,” Ackerman said, adding that he felt it was a mediocre
performance. “Not even close to my best,” he said.
Last year, Ackerman
won the national championship with a 9.687; his career best was
9.775 in 2002. Ackerman also finished 10th in the
horizontal bar after he lost his grip and had to dismount halfway
through his routine and finished with an 8.812.
The back-to-back
national champion had one of the loudest cheering sections in the
arena, with his parents and teammates cheering on “Ack” as he
flipped and tumbled on the floor.
West Point
Staging the event
at West Point seemed the perfect home. It sits on the outskirts of
the sleepy town of Highlands, N.Y., the ultimate small-college town
where the event took over the town and surrounding areas for three
days. Families and friends, as well as some teams, had to stay up to
a half hour away because the nearby Holiday Inn Express could only
hold so many. The stands were about two-thirds full, and the local
flavor rang through the gymnasium.
West Point had only
one competitor in the individual competition on Saturday night –
Brian Lee. When Lee took the mat to begin his ring routine, the
crowd became electric, cheering louder than after the national
anthem – and at West Point, that’s saying something.
“Being on my home
court was amazing,” Lee, a senior giving his last collegiate
performance, said after the competition. “To finish out in this gym
and with this crowd, it really pumped me up.”
Lee’s performance
earned him a commanding 9.687, but was nipped for the national
championship by the event’s final competitor, Oklahoma’s David
Henderson, who posted a 9.700. Henderson competes for Oklahoma with
his brother, Jamie.
The great irony, of
course, was the awarding of a national championship to Ackerman at
West Point. While he would not be allowed to attend the military
academy or serve in the army, it was a young cadet, clad in a formal
uniform, bringing Ackerman his national championship trophy as the
announcer bellowed over the sound system, “NCAA champion Graham
Ackerman.”
The NCAA has a
sense of humor, it seemed.
Gays in Gymnastics
In part because of
their small stature and the perception that gymnastics is a women's
sport, many people have the impression that every male gymnast is
gay.
A gymnast who has
chosen to stay in the closet for now talked with Outsports under
anonymity about being gay in gymnastics. He said that while he
believes most collegiate gymnasts are straight, there are a number
of gay athletes in collegiate gymnasts. However, other than Graham
Ackerman, he only had confirmation from one: a teammate of his. That
other teammate is the only person on his team whom he has come out
to.
Still, he said,
rumors fly about members of a number of teams.
It’s not
surprising. Simply watching the movements of some of the athletes as
they run down the ramp toward the vault, or that they incorporate
into their floor exercises, it’s hard to believe any straight man
would ever move like that in public, let alone on national
television. Of course, by that thinking, every man playing football
would be straight – and that is certainly not the case.
And, to be sure,
there was plenty of eye candy. The closeted gymnast admitted that
there is, at times, a hint of distraction to being gay in a sport
where the bodies on the men are often so beautiful.
While many men may
watch gymnastics for the eye candy, the overall theme of the meet
was camaraderie. Despite being mostly West Point locals, seemingly
the entire crowd cheered for every competitor from every team –
something that has been lost in the crowds of most team sporting
events today.
Though, if anyone
discredits gymnastics as a team sport, all they had to do was watch
Ackerman throughout the meet. After his floor exercise, he was
cheering on his teammates, helping them position some of the
apparati, giving them pep talks – a true captain and a true
teammate.
Ackerman, a senior
at the University of California, doesn’t know whether his gymnastics
career will continue after he graduates this spring. He said his
focus for the last year has been this competition, and that the
moments after the competition were the first ones he was allowing
himself to think about what might be next.
“I love gymnastics,
and I’d love to continue with it,” he said after the competition.
Injuries have taken their toll on him, though, as he categorized
gymnastics as a tough sport that puts an incredible amount of strain
on the body. Other athletes we spoke to echoed that sentiment and
said that, despite their fit appearance, many had already had been
through a litany of surgeries and physical therapy just to keep
their body able to compete. |