In 1999, Mark
Welsh and a friend were getting some laughs from one
another imagining the most ridiculous ideas for a team of
athletes they could come up with. The visuals they conjured
up, particularly of the drag queen relay team, were priceless.
What came out of it were the seeds of Team
Flame, a team of openly gay professional athletes. For the
last two years, they have attained corporate sponsorship money
for their members, offered emotional and professional support,
and have been a visible presence of gay men and women in the
heterosexual world of professional sports.
Welsh, 28, isn’t just the founder of Team Flame, he’s also a
member. Welsh has been an active triathlete for almost a
decade. When he isn’t hunting down sponsors for
Team Flame or teaching aquatics at a local sports club, he’s
swimming 10 miles, running 35 miles, and biking 150 miles
every week. And that’s not including the yoga.
It wasn’t always all bikes and Speedos for Welsh.
During his sophomore year at Purdue University in Indiana, he
was, at 5-feet-11, a "small" 125 pounds at best.
That year he was inspired by a triathlon he saw on ABC.
Running, swimming, and biking. He could do that. Well,
two-thirds of them anyway - at the time, Welsh didn’t swim.
A girl friend (that’s two words), started teaching
him how to swim, and swim fast. He also started taking an
Outward Bound Mountaineering class to gain weight and get into
shape. And in the summer between his junior and seniors years
as a Boilermaker, Welsh ran his first Triathlon in his home
state of Wisconsin.
Nine
years, 33 more pounds and a qualification for the National
Championships later, Welsh is living in San Francisco and
making an impact outside of his own pair of Nikes. While
continuing to aim for the Olympic team in 2004, he is building
an organization that is unique.
That unique aspect is something that Welsh hopes to play up
more. He is well aware of the stereotype in the straight
community that gays can’t be athletes as well. Welsh also
sees that stereotype propagated in the gay community, where
athletics are often discouraged.
If anyone can understand the aversion some have to sports,
it’s Welsh. While growing up a scrawny kid in the Midwest,
he was inspired to become a distance runner in 1984 by Joan
Benoit Samuelson’s victory in the first ever Olympic women’s
marathon. He got to run a year of junior varsity
cross-country, but personal family problems resulted in having
to live with foster families between Indiana and Wisconsin for
his high school years. With all of the emotional turmoil in
his life at that time, he lost his self-confidence and his
will to run.
He later found that self-confidence again, and has become a
high performance athlete after years of hard work. With Team
Flame he hopes to "demonstrate to the gay community that’s
it’s possible to be gay and be an elite athlete. We’re
here to facilitate that and to mentor up and coming
athletes."
Team Flame has an active membership of five
professional and elite amateur athletes, including Welsh. All
of them are openly gay and all individual sport athletes -
three triathletes, a distance runner, and a sprinter. Welsh
hopes to attract athletes in team sports as well, but no
active athletes have come out in the U.S. as of yet.
With nicknames like "Fever Blister," "Sizzle
Lean," and "Sister Singe," one can see the
underlying current of humor on Team Flame. Welsh insists that,
in pro sports, you have to keep your sense of humor. And
particularly with Team Flame, he wants "to be clear that
we’re not just flamers, but we’re not afraid to be
flamers, either."
A big piece of what Team Flame does for its members is help
identify sponsorship money. For many individual sport
athletes, sponsorship money translates into the ability to
travel to, and enter in, races and competitions. When Team
Flame was originally founded, this was a huge concern for
Welsh, being a gay athlete.
"I was concerned when looking for sponsors,"
Welsh says. "I started asking myself, do I include Gay
Games in my resume?"
To Welsh’s pleasant surprise, it didn’t take him long
to find Team Flame’s first sponsor, Sports Basement, a
sporting goods store in San Francisco. Since then, he has
secured sponsorships from companies such as Clif Bar and
Speedo. Welsh even admits, "I think my sexuality has
helped with some sponsorships." A strong statement from
someone who was concerned as to whether he’d be able to get
them at all.
With more talk about gay professional athletes recently,
Welsh is starting to see another need for Team Flame--advancing the notion among closeted athletes that it’s
OK
to come out.
"It’s a call to them to come out and come
together," Welsh says. "I haven’t gone through
that much, but reading what other athletes (Billie Jean,
Martina) have had to go through, wouldn’t they like to have
had a mentor to help them?"
There
are a couple ways Welsh is trying to accomplish this. He is trying to reach out to athletes, either active or
retired, to help mentor those closeted athletes who are maybe
just now wondering if there’s a career after the door to the
closet is opened. In the last couple of months, he has been
contacted by a former Division I coach about doing just that.
Also, Team Flame is reaching out to colleges and
universities, and the NCAA. This, Welsh hopes, will help
develop a more gay-friendly environment in sports before
athletes enter the world of professional sports.
"I think it’s kind of sad that Martina, Billie Jean,
and Louganis had to come out after their careers were over. I
think it’s important to have an organization out there to
help an athlete deal with their sexuality while they are still
active pro athletes."
In the next year, Welsh will be focused on
training and racing to make a run at the U.S. Olympic Team in
2004. For Team Flame, he’ll be looking for more sponsors and
team members, and hoping that Martina gives a call soon.