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Gay Jocks
Bond
Progress Is Still Slow, but More Athletes Are Reaching Out
By
Ryan Quinn
Outsports.com
Related:
Not out at UCLA |
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The Internet
has done wonders for gay people. The ability to anonymously read
articles and participate in message board discussions allows an
athlete to explore his identity in ways that otherwise might have
kept closed off, even from himself.
For gay
college athletes, this cloak of anonymity has jump-started a
coming-out momentum that’s long overdue. A community of openly gay
college athletes has emerged on the Net, and the transition from
online curiosity to full disclosure with teammates has been positive
in almost every case.
In the past
two years I’ve spoken with and received e-mails from almost 36 gay
athletes who want to come out but who first want to bond with other
gay athletes and share their experiences. The Internet is the most
convenient setting for this exchange.
“I came out in the beginning of my sophomore year here at Cal and in
retrospect it was one of the best decisions I’ve made,” said
Graham
Ackerman, (left), a captain on the Cal, Berkeley, Gymnastics team.
Ackerman
won an NCAA title in floor exercise in 2005, 'was a two-time
NCAA champion in 2004, competed in the 2003 World University Games
in Korea, and has placed in the Top 3 at U.S. Nationals.
“I
credit the upperclassmen at that time a great deal with smoothing
out the entire process as it was very new to all of us,” he said.
“As it turned out, I couldn’t have asked for a better reaction from
my teammates. Because we spent so much time together in and out of
the gym, it was not a huge surprise for most of them. The process
has been a great learning experience for myself, my teammates and my
coaches.”
As a senior,
Ackerman has been winning the floor exercise consistently in meets
while leading the Golden Bears to their No. 7 national ranking. The
NCAA Championships for Gymnastics will be held April 7-9 in West
Point, NY.
Jack Nelson, a
sophomore Nordic skier at Williams College in Massachusetts, came
out to his best friend on the ski team while they were rooming
together at a team training camp. Nelson said they stayed up for
hours talking and that his teammate was almost more excited about
his coming out than he was. Nelson told the rest of his team by
making an announcement over dinner. He described their reaction as
amazing and said it had brought the team closer.
Ackerman,
Nelson, and others make up a community that is transient and not
measurably large, but their visibility benefits another group that
cannot be measured anyway: the “invisible” college students
(athletes and sports fans alike) who are not yet out.
Sharing Stories
Jordan
Goldwarg, a cross-country skier, and I started a
website specifically for college athletes to share their
stories. There are hundreds of examples of gay college athletes who
are actively seeking advice, support, or even just the reassurance
that others have succeeded in normalizing their identity as an
openly gay college athlete.
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I’ve talked to
athletes in a range of sports and from different parts
of the country and not one has said their team wasn’t
ready for them. |
One of my
friends, who I won’t name because he is not yet out, plays Division
I college football and though he is comfortable with being gay
himself, he is waiting for the right time to come out to his team.
He and countless others who are not yet out use the Internet to
connect so that gradually the uncertainty of coming out becomes
manageable.
When I came
out in 2001 as a sophomore on the University of Utah ski team I did
not know any other gay college athletes. I hadn’t even heard of any
who were currently competing. It wasn’t that they didn’t exist. I
just didn’t know how to find them. There were no
archives of coming
out stories to read online and no e-mail correspondence with
athletes around the country who were happily out to their teams.
But things
have changed. Today, if you’re gay and you like sports and you know
what Google is, there’s no reason to be left in the dark. And people
are taking advantage of this. I
wrote an article for Outsports during my senior year in college about coming out to my
team and competing for two years as an openly gay athlete. Over the
course of a week I received 280 e-mails, mostly from people who were
in high school, college, or recently graduated. Not all were
athletes themselves, but they were using the Internet for the same
reassurance.
There are about 356,000 student-athletes
competing in NCAA sports, according to
the NCAA’s website. I wouldn’t be surprised if 35,000 (10%) of
them are gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgendered (or will identify
themselves as one of these later in life). Even 5%, or 17,500, is
still a lot of gay athletes. I think my 10% estimate is closer to
reality because we are still not ahead of the curve in terms of
people coming out.
There are far more gay athletes who are closeted
than out. A search the Outsports/Coach Gumby
Out Athlete
Registry for out athletes who competed in
college yields 69 athletes. If you search for college athletes who
are closeted, you get 469. We’ve got a ways to go.
Nevertheless,
the openly gay college athlete is noticeably more visible than just
five years ago. But for a group of young men and woman struggling
with questions of identity that most of their peers never consider,
has any real progress been made?
Making Progress
“Things are
incrementally getting better,” said
Dave Lohse, Associate Athletic
Communications Director at the University of North Carolina in
Chapel Hill. “I have ultimate faith that the young people that come
through our colleges are not going to make the same mistakes as my
generation and other previous generations with regard to sexual
orientation and other things.” Lohse said that with the diverse
views spread over television and the Internet, “kids don’t buy into
the same stereotypes that their elders sell them.”
I agree,
though this evolution of tolerance seems painfully slow. In my
impatience I’ve often wondered what could speed it up. I believe our
culture is ready for openly gay professional athletes. I believe
college teams from swimming to football are ready for openly gay
teammates. Not everyone’s ready, but who are we waiting for?
I don’t care
how loud the intolerant anti-gay minority gets or how many amendments
they propose, but waiting for them to be born again with reason is
not only a waste of our time, it’s a waste of our lives. I’ve talked
to athletes in a range of sports and from different parts of the
country and not one has said their team wasn’t ready for them. Their
lives, both athletic and social, have changed for the better since
coming out.
The largest
obstacle to improving the climate for gay and lesbian college
athletes is their absence. Athletic departments say they’re open to
discuss homophobia, bring in speakers, and hold training sessions
for coaches. But these plans don’t get far when the group of
athletes they are designed to support is mysteriously absent. Or not
absent but hidden. There will be no breakthrough without more
athletes who come out.
Lohse came out
in 1992 and says he’s somewhat disappointed with where we are 13
years later in terms of how many gay people are out in sport.
Despite the success stories of openly gay athletes (and there are
far more stories of success than intolerance), Lohse believes it’s
still just as hard for people who are not out. “We can’t judge
whether or not someone should come out. It’s their decision,” he
said.
The personal
leap to openly confront one’s sexual orientation is still a great
one, especially in college athletics. Nelson, the skier at Williams,
knew last fall that he couldn’t have been in a safer place to come
out.
“I knew there
would be no bad reaction,” said Nelson, whose coach, Jordan Goldwarg,
is openly gay and had a similar
coming out experience on the
Williams team two years ago. Nevertheless, Nelson described the time
leading up to his coming out as “stressful” and he put off telling
his teammates until a training camp over Christmas. Clearly, it’s
one thing to know that acceptance from teammates is likely, and
quite another to actually test it.
My friend who
plays Division I college football says the environment on his team
is all about trust and camaraderie. His biggest fear is that coming
out would make him different enough that he’d lose the feeling of
belonging to the team. While he’s confident that the friends and
teammates he’s closest to will be OK with it, there are 90 people on
his team and he fears that some of them, especially
the ones he doesn’t know well, might have a problem with a gay
teammate.
Maintaining Trust
Football
may be unique, given the sport’s pervasive stereotypes and ingrained hypermasculine expectations. I’ve always believed there was nothing
inherently more homophobic about contact team sports than
other sports. But most people think gay athletes have an easier time
in individual sports. Why is that? My teammates depended on me as
much as they would have had we been playing hockey or football
instead of skiing. I wonder if we haven’t just convinced ourselves
that college and professional football is still off limits to openly
gay players. We won’t know until someone comes out.
Football
aside, more athletes say their decision to come out was based on a
sense that they should tell their straight teammates. It’s
unfair to hide it from them for precisely the same reasons they felt
they had to hide it: to maintain the trust and camaraderie.
“Young
lesbian and gay athletes are increasingly more likely to feel
entitled to be out and expect coaches, teammates, the public to deal
with it, if not support it,” said
Pat Griffin, author of “Strong
Women, Deep Closets,” a former coach and a professor at the
University of Massachusetts, Amherst.
One point that
the openly gay male athletes unanimously agreed on was that life was
better after coming out. And not just for them.
“My teammates were, and continue to be,
some of my closest friends,” Ackerman said,
“and I felt that hiding such a large part of my own identity from
them was almost insulting in a way. I wanted to be able to be
completely open and honest as I began to take on more
responsibilities in terms of leading my team and did not want hiding
my sexual orientation to hinder that.”
Nelson said
his coming out brought up the level of intellectual conversations on
the team. Teammates gained a new level of respect for him,
even those who previously had made inadvertent comments that could
be perceived as less than accepting before they knew he was gay.
'Double Silencer for Lesbians'
I should note
a difference I’ve come across in the experiences of gay and
lesbian athletes. Men’s and women’s sports are at about the same
place in terms of how many athletes are coming out. What’s different
is what happens next. Lesbians seem to be met with a more passive
reaction from teammates, to the point where it is often not talked
about after the athlete initially comes out.
Griffin attributes these differences to gender expectations and
sexism. “All women in sport are potentially intimidated by the
‘lesbian label,’ defensive about their ‘femininity,’ [while] still
fighting for equality in sport opportunities, media coverage, and
recognition,” she said. “Until the lesbian label no longer carries
the negative sting it does now, people who want to control women's
sports can use the label to intimidate, silence, and discriminate
against women in sport. This acts as a double silencer for
lesbians.”
But that
doesn’t mean that there are more or fewer lesbian athletes than gay
male athletes. The context is just different.
“Women's
teams with a lesbian or bisexual coach or teammate are increasingly
accepting of her, especially if she is discrete [closeted in public]
and the coach supports her,” Griffin said.
On the other
hand, having a gay male athlete come out is simpler concept: you’re either out or you’re invisible. For those who
have come out, most gay male athletes say their straight teammates
have grown comfortable asking them about what it’s like to be gay
and also making jokes, which they say affirms true acceptance rather
than mere tolerance.
Griffin noted
that, “Lesbian athletes and coaches can
often build community with other lesbian athletes and coaches even
if it is a closeted community, whereas it is more difficult for gay
men in college athletics to do this since they are more closeted,
invisible.”
Geography Is Destiny
Where an
athlete attends school is another factor that weighs heavily on how
he is accepted. “In conversations that I have had with other gay
athletes across the country, their team’s acceptance seems closely
related to the setting of the school, and cannot be universally
measured,” said Ackerman, who goes to school in the socially liberal
Bay Area. “In that respect, I do not think that athletics is much
different than the rest of society.”
“It definitely
has to do with where I am,” said Nelson, noting Williams, located in
Massachusetts, is an open-minded campus. But his perception was that
the level of acceptance on other teams, such as lacrosse, hockey,
and football, would be different. “Endurance sports attract more
individualistic people,” he said, and on team sports there is more
pressure to be a certain kind of man. Again, I think this is
contrived, but it’s real enough that it makes it more difficult for
guys to come out in contact team sports. Ackerman said the
environment at Berkeley was tolerant enough that people would feel
comfortable being out in any sports program.
The city where
my Division I football friend goes to school is plenty accepting of
gays, he said. “It’s football [that has the problem].”
A final
significant factor in an athlete’s coming out experience is the
attitude of the coach. The coach’s role cannot be understated. I
came out to my teammates before I told my coach, but I felt that
even though he already knew, I needed to have that conversation
one on one. The coach on any team plays an influential role in
setting the attitude about everything from where to go to dinner to
how to respond to a gay teammate.
After I came out to my coach, he
told me to let him know if anyone made derogatory comments or made
me feel uncomfortable. I told him that I wasn’t easy to offend so I
wasn’t worried about that, but he said he wanted to know anyway
because those comments had no place on the team. It meant a lot hear
that and to know that that standard was absorbed on some level by my
teammates.
Being able to
continue the conversation about being gay with teammates and coaches
breeds an environment of honesty and respect that goes a long way in
bringing the team closer together. Incidentally, this ability to
bring the team closer together is the most overlooked aspect for
closeted athletes weighing their decision to come out.
Of all people
in our culture today, I believe gay college athletes are in a
uniquely advantageous position. In many ways, college athletes
provide an important bridge between the core themes of straight and
gay culture--the traditional epitome of heterosexuality on one hand
and the gay culture’s homoeroticization of athletics on the other.
Strangely, as
gay issues are discussed more openly both on popular gay TV programs
and in State of the Union addresses, it seems fewer gay people are
willing to stick their necks out and risk taking a personal stand.
It’s easier, perhaps, to pick a side on a partisan platform than to
explore one’s identity on a more personal level. As a result,
individual success stories are being overshadowed by an abstract
culture war that is more fixated on legal and political battles than
person ones.
Taking a Personal Stand
Meanwhile,
one by one, athletes are coming out. Interestingly, they’re
doing it for themselves and for their teams, not for any larger
movement.
“The best
advice I can give any gay or lesbian athlete coming out is to
continually find a personal balance that allows you to
simultaneously reach your maximum potential athletically while also
exploring your gay identity,” said Ackerman. “I think too often many
people, including gay athletes, see the two as being incompatible
with one another, which simply is not true.”
“The most
political thing you can do is come out,” said Lohse, referring not
the partisan meaning of political but to the sense that it can
change hearts and minds. “When you put a face on the person, it’s
just not as easy to hate.”
What will it
take for a “big-sport” athlete to come out? Griffin says,
“It will take a confident, extremely
talented athlete who is completely comfortable with their sexuality
and is ready to deal with the ensuing media storm.”
Any high profile athlete will have to be sure of himself, love his
sport, and be good enough friends with his teammates that avoiding
his sexual orientation is a bigger deal than confronting it. That’s
how it was for my teammates and me. That’s how it’s been for my
other friends who came out to their teams. What sport we compete in
doesn’t matter.
It’s one thing
not to come out because you’re not ready. It is so very important
that you have your own head about you before coming out to others.
But I think we’re far past the point where the conservative views of
our culture are an honest excuse to remain closeted. Besides, life’s
too short to wait for a whole society to get over its ambivalence.
It’s important to know that you don’t have to wait for anyone. When
you’re ready, come out. It’s worth it. And there’s a whole network
of support in place to take advantage of.
Ryan Quinn, a native
of Alaska, was a cross-country skier at the University of Utah. He
now lives in New York.
Read his story
about coming out to his team.
Discuss this story. One post is from a closeted jock who said
"this particular topic has really touched home."
March 7, 2005 |