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Seeking
Boyfriend Who Loves Sports
By Cyd Zeigler Jr.
Outsports.com
I was chatting on gay.com about a week ago
when I got an instant message from "jock26inLA." We
chatted a little bit about where we were in LA and what we were up
to - you get the picture. And then I asked him if he had seen the
Lakers-Kings game. He said he didn’t like basketball. I asked him
if he watches much football. He said he doesn’t like sports much.
OK. This guy’s handle is
JOCK26inla.
So I asked him what the jock stood for.
"It sounds good."
Why is it so damned hard to find a boyfriend
who likes sports? Like Jock26 implies, a jock/sportsdude sounds
good. There’s something about it that other guys are generally
attracted to. Just take a look at the athletic/jock types that most
guys drool over in the A&F catalogs. And in an era when it’s
getting cooler and cooler in the gay community to "act
straight", why don’t more gay guys like sports? They
certainly go to the gym and watch what they eat enough.
Personally, I’ve never dated a "sports
fan." I dated a guy who would tolerate the Thanksgiving Day
football games about three years ago. And then there was the guy who
actually liked the Vikings. Unfortunately, he ONLY liked the
Vikings.
My last boyfriend, Jerry, was par for the
course.
It was mid-March - just two weeks to go before
selection Sunday for the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament. My
Stanford Cardinal were playing against USC - a crucial game for both
teams: Stanford was jockeying for a #1 seed in the West and USC was
making a run for one of the "bubble" bids.
I had planned my night around the game, and
had been psyching myself up to watch it all week long. When I got
home that night, just five minutes before tip-off, my boyfriend
Jerry was sitting in front of the TV eating dinner.
"Hey Jer," I said, "I need the
TV in five minutes for the Stanford game."
He glared at me and said, "I’m watching
'Friends'."
And so went our relationship.
When we first met in April of 2000, it was the
annual lull in sports. Major League Baseball had started, the NFL
was on hiatus, the major college sports had come to an end, and the
NHL and NBA had just started their marathon 10-week playoffs. So, it
was really easy for those first two months to spend a lot of time
together and ignore the fact that I love sports and he doesn’t.
Then, in June, it started. The NBA Finals
featured the Lakers. I live in L.A. NFL training camps opened after
that, and I started paying attention to every move certain teams
made.
In September, I told Jerry that I was going to
be spending Sundays during the NFL season at Jim’s house with our
NFL crew. He asked me how long the season lasts. It was just 17
Sundays and a few playoff games. That, he could handle. He worked
most Sundays anyway. There wasn’t going to be a problem here.
But then there was a game every Monday night.
I had forgotten to tell him that.
And college football was played on Saturdays.
Every Saturday.
And after the NFL season was right when
college basketball started getting good and Stanford was good this
year and had a real shot to win it all. That goes until April when
the Lakers would make another run at the title.
I’d be free again in July.
Of course, all of the guys I’ve dated have
had interests that I wanted nothing to do with. But I notice an
interesting pattern with the non-sports fans that I’ve dated -
best exemplified by my relationship with Jerry. Jerry is a dancer,
and a damn good one at that. He loves dancing - it’s his passion.
He could tell you more about Tina Landon than I could ever know
about Randy Moss.
Week One of the NFL season, I invited Jerry to
watch a Monday Night Football game with me. He said no. He asked me
to see "Billy Elliott." I said yes.
I asked him to come play football with my
friends and me. He said no. He asked me to go out dancing with him.
I said yes.
I asked him to come watch a Stanford-Long
Beach State basketball game. He said no. He asked me to watch a
dance recital a friend of his was in. I said yes.
There’s a kind of resentment that gay guys
have toward other gay guys who like sports. My friend James has this
great story where he met this guy around Memorial Day, and it was
made very clear from the beginning that James was a huge football
fan. They dated all summer, and once football began in September,
James made a point of being accommodating so that the guy didn't
feel neglected. But the guy would get pissed every time James chose
to watch a game over being with him.
The final straw was when James kept long-standing
plans for his birthday of watching the NFL games with a group of
friends. When
the guy found out, he looked at James and yelled - not said, but yelled:
"I hate football. I despise football. I loathe football."
James was on the market again by half-time.
I’ve often wondered how straight guys do it.
Most of them are married to women who just don’t like sports. And
every Saturday and Sunday in the autumn they sit around in their
inflatable chairs with the cup holders and throw chips at the TV and high five and hoot and holler and poor Jennifer has to simply
flee the house from the building testosterone levels.
But, I guess therein lies a big difference
between gay men and straight men: they’re naturally attracted to
something that’s different from them; I’m naturally attracted to
what’s similar to me. I guess it’s not my fault after all.
There is one sport that piqued Jerry’s
interest: tennis. He’s not much of a men’s tennis fan - he
prefers women’s tennis. It seems that every gay guy I know who
doesn’t like sports, for some reason, likes women’s tennis. Like
Stefi Graf and Martina cast some spell over them in the 80’s and
early 90’s, and they were hooked.
Hey, I’m not complaining. It was a JOY last
Independence Day, on a four-day weekend in Laguna, to watch the
quarterfinals of Wimbledon with Jerry. It was a milestone for us -
actually watching a sporting event together. Now that’s an
anniversary I’ll celebrate.
Of course, Jerry and I are no more. He's
dating a soccer player now. A wide receiver was just more than he could
handle.
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