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These Aren't the
Gay Games
Only 11 Competing in Athens Are Publicly Out
By
Jim Buzinski
Outsports.com
The 2004 Summer
Olympics in Athens will host 10,500 athletes from 199 countries, but
there are only 11 openly and publicly gay jocks among them,
proving once again that sports remain the final closet in
contemporary life.
The 11 are:
Robert Dover (American equestrian rider and subject of a
terrific profile);
Guenter Seidel (an American on the equestrian team),
Carl Hester
(British dressage team), Blyth Tait (a champion New
Zealand horseman), Rob Newton (British hurdler); tennis
players Amelie Mauresmo, Conchita Martinez and Martina Navratilova, Dutch swimmer
Johan
Kenkhuis (who came out earlier this year, and won
won silver in the men's 4x100
freestyle relay), German cyclist
Judith Arndt and female German fencer
Imke
Duplitzer (who lost in the quarterfinals). There were
seven at the Sydney 2000 Games.
Arndt's sexuality
became very public on the second day of competition in Athens when
she won the silver in the women's road race, then
popped the finger to the German Cycling Federation as she
crossed the finish line. According to
Deutsche Welle news service, "Arndt was disconsolate with her
silver medal following the race, accusing the German Cycling
Federation of squandering a chance to win gold by excluding her
girlfriend, sprinter Petra Rossner, from the Olympic team. "Of
course we're happy to have won the silver medal, but actually, we've
lost the gold," Arndt said after the race. "If Petra Rossner had
been nominated, we could've had the gold. She would've been our
trump card, because she's the fastest."
I want to stress
that these 11 are publicly out; there might be others who are out
to teammates or their sport, but haven’t yet reached the media radar
screen (drop
me a line if I’ve missed anyone; a huge thanks to those readers
who already contributed).
Dover told the
Associated Press there are scores more not ready to be open.
"You spend a day with these athletes, and it becomes obvious that
gay people are everywhere," Dover said. "The reason many of them
aren't out is because they're focused on their job during this time
when sports is the No. 1 thing in their lives."
Simple math and
common sense will tell you that many more gay or lesbian athletes
will be competing. If 10% of the athletes are gay, that’s 1,000
people. Too high? Try 5%, which leaves 500. Still too high? OK, 1%
still leaves 100. And even one-half of 1% still means there are 50
gay or lesbian athletes. Imagine the public attention if 50 athletes
held a press conference in Athens to declare their homosexuality.
There is also at
least one anomaly: U.S. 800-meter runner Derrick Peterson. In 2002.
Peterson got some attention when he told Genre magazine, “"I hate
labels. I don't really care what people think of my sexual
orientation, I like men and women. One thing I will say for sure,
I'm definitely not heterosexual!" A few weeks after the article
appeared, Peterson reversed himself, saying he wasn’t gay and
professing his love for his girlfriend; he said his past comments
about being with men was part of an “experimental phase.” Gay?
Straight? Try confused.
The lack of
publicly visible gay athletes in Athens is ironic. The original
Olympics, which spanned 1,200 years, were in many ways the first
circuit parties. They were all-male affairs (including spectators)
and the athletes competed in the nude. The cult of the body reigned
supreme and the Greeks were very comfortable with men being in
homosexual relationships. Athletes devoted full-time to training and
were the celebrities of their day.
This history makes
the current state of affairs all that more depressing. British
hurdler Newton, for example, told Instinct magazine, “I don’t know
any other gay athletes, if there are any.” And he decried the very
closeted nature of sports, attributing it to “stigma. It’s 2004, for
God’s sake. I’m not treated differently, so other athletes should
see me as an inspiration.”
The reasons
athletes stay in closet cross sport and geographic lines: fear of
the reaction from teammates, management and fans; fear of losing
endorsements and sponsorships; and a general fear of sticking out
when single-minded devotion is needed to succeed. This litany will
remain until more athletes come out and the result is one big yawn.
Editor's note: When this story
first appeared, we only knew of four. Thanks to readers, seven more
(Guenter Seidel, Carl Hester, Judith Arndt, Blyth Tait,
Conchita Martinez, Imke Duplitzer and
Johan
Kenkhuis) were added to the list.
Aug. 11, 2004
Updated Aug. 21, 2004 |