|
Cowboy Hate
Speech
Players Use Homophobic Slurs to Attack Writer
|
|
By
Jim Buzinski
Outsports.com
Discuss this topic
Anonymous players
for the Dallas Cowboys used homophobic slurs in a letter attacking a
reporter from the Dallas Morning News who wrote critically of the
team’s performance.
The Dallas Observer
(read the
entire article here) obtained a copy of the letter, posted in
the team’s locker room in late November, which attacked Morning News
beat writer Jean-Jacques Taylor. John Gonzalez, the Observer writer
who broke the story, said he "obtained
a copy of the letter from a kind DMN scribe who,
incidentally, doesn't write about football. We're not positive
whether the spelling and grammatical errors are the result of the
players' lack of intelligence or our source's lack of typing skills.
Either way, here's the letter, word for word and completely
unchanged since it made its way to us":
"Dear readers,
Jacques has wrote some things about alot of the players on the
Dallas Cowboys football team that wasn't cool. But be he knows what
goes on in the locker room (cock watcher) but he really doesn't know
much. If he knew as much about football as he does a bout
(performing in a certain way on the manly seed) then maybe you could
listen to his B.S. opinion. Maybe he should take a look in the mirro
and criticize himself before others. Maybe he should stop eating
McDonald's and spend a little more time with Jared from Subway. We
don't judge you bitch, you're not all that yourself. Instead of
asking the players on theis team and making us look bad to our fans.
What fuckin' team are you watching? Get a life 'C.' You are a fraud.
You ask for phone numbers then turn on us when things aren't going
so good. You are a fake person. Sometimes you're cool and sometimes
you are a (homosexual F). Good luck never becoming a columnist."
The
player or player who wrote the letter are unidentified, though the
Observer said many fingers point to Cowboys safety Roy Williams
(pictured left). As Gonzalez wrote:
“The same day
Taylor's story ran, a copy of it was pinned up in Williams' locker,
which is why everyone I talked to in the [Dallas-Fort Worth] sports
media thinks that Williams was the author of the unsigned note.
That's the hunch here, too. Williams denied it to NBC 5 sports
anchorman Newy Scruggs. ‘Right before we went on the air after it
happened,’ Scruggs says, ‘he told me that he only wrote the 'dear
reader' part and that some of the other guys filled in the rest.’ ”
The Cowboys
organization response, via public relations head Rich Dalrymple
was, "It's something we don't condone as an organization, and it's
been handled internally," though no specifics were given.
Taylor told
the Observer that he wasn’t fazed by the letter. "It didn't really
bother me," Taylor said. "If you're gonna make a living criticizing
people, you gotta be able to take it when they come back at you.
That's the price of doing business. The only problem I had was that
when I write something, I put my name on it. If you want to speak up
and say something about me, at least be man enough to put your name
on it.
"I don't know
who wrote it for sure, but if you connect the dots, you could
probably figure it out."
What was
Taylor’s crime to warrant such an attack? He wrote a story that
broke down player salaries and whether, based on performance, the
Cowboys were getting good value for their money. Williams was
mentioned with this comment: “You can blame the [defensive] scheme,
in part, but you can also count his big plays on one hand."
This seems
like more than fair criticism for a team that was expected to
contend for a division title but is instead 4-7 and has faint
playoff hopes only because it plays in the weak NFC. The Cowboys
defense has been sieve-like, allowing the fourth-most points in the
NFC. Williams in his first two seasons combined had seven
interceptions, five forced fumbles and four sacks; through 11 games
this season he has zero in each category.
The letter’s
focus on homophobic slurs to attack Taylor is sad and offensive and
shows again how backwards sports are in dealing with the issue.
Calling someone a fag is still the ultimate put-down in most locker
rooms, as our
list of anti-gay slurs shows. The Cowboys who authored the
letter also showed what cowards they are; why be afraid of a mere
sportswriter, especially someone you perceive as gay, and therefore
less of a man?
Gonzalez’s
article is terrific and I hope it will lead to more coverage of this
issue; shining a spotlight on such actions is one way to combat
them. I’ll leave him with the final word:
“So to
whoever wrote the letter, I say this: We've known for a while now
that you need to become better football players, but now we know,
too, that you need to become better, and bigger, people.
“Also, feel
free to pin this story up in the locker room when you're done
sounding out the big words.”
Dec. 2, 2004 |