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Tuaolo Talks Diversity
With NFL
Ex-Player Tells League Employees What It's Like to Be a Gay
By
Jim Buzinski
Outsports.com
Esera Tuaolo has
given many talks since he came out two years ago as a former NFL
player who is gay. But none may have been more fulfilling than
addressing the league he played in for nine years.
Responding
to an invitation he described as “kind of a shocker to me,” Tuaolo
on June 30 spoke to nearly 200 NFL employees at league headquarters in New York on the
topic of being a gay man in sports. He told the audience, which
included top league executives, how important it was for gay
and lesbian employees to have the same rights as heterosexuals in
employment and benefits, and for the league to be accepting of gay
players.
“It was a very
uplifting experience for me,” Tuaolo told Outsports, “and an
eye-opening experience for the employees in the NFL because it’s
such a homophobic environment in pro football."
Tuaolo was invited
by the league to speak as part of its diversity program, and
suggested that he believed some gay NFL employees pushed for it.
Commissioner Paul Tagliabue was unable to attend, but Tuaolo said he
received a letter from him expressing his appreciation for the
player’s appearance.
Tuaolo played in
the league as a defensive lineman for nine seasons, most of them
with the Minnesota Vikings. He created a national splash when he
came out in October 2002 after retiring. Tuaolo’s story was
compelling—a 300-pound defensive lineman who was also an
accomplished singer with a partner of eight years and two children.
His success in a brutal position in a brutal sport shattered
perceptions of what a gay athlete was.
In his talk to the
NFL, Tuaolo used his family, and that of his partner Mitchell’s
sister-in-law, to make a point about equality. Using pictures of
both families, Tuaolo weaved a story that highlighted the
similarities they shared, but also the crucial differences. The
latter focused on the protections and benefits afforded heterosexual
families that are denied to gay and lesbian families. He urged the
league to adopt domestic partner benefits for its employees and
players.
“I told them they
need to change with the times,” Tuaolo said. He described the
reaction to his hour-plus talk as “fantastic” and said that league
official Art Shell, a Hall of Fame offensive lineman and former head
coach with the Raiders, made a point of shaking his hand and sitting
in the front row.
“I hope it’s the
start of something … I think I got my message across,” Tuaolo said.
He also has a sense of history, specifically thanking
David Kopay, a former NFL player who came out in the 1970s.
"God bless Dave Kopay for all he's done," Tuaolo said. "I hope what
I did would help what he started."
Tuaolo hopes his NFL talk is a beginning, not an end,
adding that he wanted the NFL to integrate the topic of homophobia
into its 2005 rookie symposium, which all incoming players must
attend. The New York Times quoted league spokesman Greg Aiello as
saying “we are clearly evaluating that idea and how it can be done.”
49ers Preach Diversity
Tuaolo’s appearance
comes on the heels of an interesting diversity workshop held in June
by the San Francisco 49ers. The session focused on race, gender,
ethnicity and sexual orientation. The team held the session in
response to two incidents of homophobia, and after meeting with San
Francisco's Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Advisory Committee.
The first incident
was the
widely reported comment by running back Garrison Hearst (now
with Denver) in 2002 that he didn't want any “faggots" as teammates.
The second was the story in ESPN the Magazine this year on
longtime team trainer Lindsy McLean, who revealed that he
was frequently verbally abused and taunted for being gay. The worst
offender, according to the article, was lineman Ted Washington (now
with Oakland), who simulated rape against McLean on at least one
occasion while others watched and did nothing.
The Times and San
Francisco Chronicle reported that the 49ers’ diversity training was
very moving for many players, getting them to understand each other
better and pointing out how intolerance of any kind can be hurtful
and divisive. Included in the presentation was a discussion of
Matthew Shepard, the Wyoming student killed in 1998 for being gay.
Some players came away with a more positive view of gay people.
"I could play
with somebody being gay," said the defensive back Ronnie Heard,
according to the Times. "Would it be weird at the beginning? Yeah,
but I can't hate him as a person. You don't have to agree
biblically, but what kind of example am I setting for my kid if I'm
an activist for blacks and I discriminate toward gays?"
"Someone might
make a stupid comment about homosexuals in the locker room,'' Heard
told the Chronicle, "and you have no idea who is hearing it. You
don't know who is gay, or who has a family member who's gay. Nobody
says anything, and then you go out on the practice field, and this
person's still mad, and he goes after the other guy. Now, you've got
a fight, and nobody knows why.''
Receiver Cedrick
Wilson echoed Heard, saying that the reality was that other players
might be gay. But, he told the Times, if he is a good player and
"his sexuality happens to be different, I could care less."
Linebacker
Brandon Moore took a more cautious approach. "Football is such a
macho sport, based around masculinity and testosterone," said Moore.
"As much as one person might hate another because of one thing, they
seem to hate more because of sexuality." Moore told the Times he
thought that the day of playing with an openly gay teammate could
arrive, but "I just don't think it is close."
"The idea wasn't
to try to change people's minds or focusing on one thing, '' Guy
McIntyre, a former 49ers offensive lineman who is now the club's
director of player programs, told the Chronicle. "It was about
changing our understanding, honestly studying what diversity means
in terms of race, gender, sexuality, and background and a lot of
other parts of our lives.''
Tuaolo said the
fact that the league held a seminar for its employees could send a
powerful message to teams, especially ones not as proactive as the
49ers.
“Change has got
to come from the top of the league, and hopefully it will trickle
down to the individual teams,” Tuaolo said.
July 8, 2004
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