Dennis Seidenberg ‘Getting Better Every Day,’ Optimistic About Game 4 Return (Video)
Plaxico Burress Launches Luxury Socks Line, Says He Hopes to Expand to Bow Ties, Cuff Links, Belts (Photos)
Jacoby Ellsbury’s Solid Effort Against White Sox Doesn’t Silence Leadoff Debate, But It Turns Volume Down a Bit
Paul George Arrives on Big Stage, But LeBron James Trumps Rising Star With Predictable Dominance
Red Sox Stop the Bleeding in Chicago, End Successful Road Trip With Huge Win
Clay Buchholz Battles Through Shaky First Inning to Earn Team-Leading Seventh Win (Video)
Red Sox-White Sox Live: Clay Buchholz Guides Red Sox to 6-2 Victory, Finally Picks Up Seventh Win
Though the statistics aren’t always so clear, the best guess we have right now is that anywhere between 2 to 10 percent of the human population can be identified as homosexual. During the 2012 seasons, 4,000 athletes spent time on the roster of one of the teams within America’s four major team sports.
Do the math.
“Any professional athlete who gets on TV or radio and says he never played with a gay guy is a stone-freakin’ idiot,” said the eminently quotable Charles Barkley in 2011. “I would even say the same thing in college. Every college player, every pro player in any sport has probably played with a gay person.”
The best thing about Barkley’s comments were his apparent exasperation with the topic, because really that’s the only appropriate reaction to the issue of gay athletes being, well, an issue — exasperation. As Barkley aptly points out, people who identify as LGBT in 2013 are just too numerous to not come into contact with on a day-to-day basis.
However, when looking at the numbers above, it absolutely begs the question as to why we are yet to see an athlete in one of the four major league sports come out, and only a few athletes in any sports have made such an admission. Although it’s utterly frustrating to look at the facts and realize that many, many people are likely willfully hiding their identities every day of their lives, we don’t have to look too far to understand just why people like Robbie Rogers live 25 years of their life before gaining the courage to simply be honest about who they love.
To understand the pervading homophobic culture in sports, we have to look no further than players like Brandon Spikes, Torii Hunter, DeSean Jackson, Manny Pacquiao, Tim Hardaway and a litany of others who have made their regrettable worldview be known.
Before going any further, to a certain extent it’s unfair to try and speculate why Rogers hid his identify for so long. We don’t know him, and all we have is about 400 words of a blog post to encapsulate a lifetime’s worth of internal struggle. More to the point, he only credits his career in soccer as an “escape” for him, and didn’t cite any struggles with teammates or the sport for keeping him in the closet.
However, we do know that Rogers struggled with being honest about who he is to the people closest to him. We know that a great deal of his life was spent pursuing soccer at the highest level. And we know that, as another NESN scribe put it earlier on Monday, Rogers felt it necessary to escape from his on-field escape, for whatever reason.
So, without making this a referendum on Rogers, specifically, this seems like absolutely the perfect time to talk about the homophobic culture that still pervades sports.
To draw an analogy, bullying has been the de jour social cause for about a year now, and we pretty much all agree that day-to-day intimidation is not a healthy thing. Yet when an athlete speaks out against gays or the idea of having a gay teammate, it’s often dismissed as that athlete exercising their free speech or something along the lines that they’re entitled to their opinion.
This is no longer a tenable excuse, as these athletes are just as guilty of bullying their gay teammates as any 10-year-old who beats up a weaker kid for their lunch money.
In short, Spikes can claim that his tweets comparing his fear of spiders to his fear of a gay teammate in the shower are in jest all he wants. However, that is a complete B.S. excuse, and Spikes has shown himself to be the worst kind of bully — the kind who picks on people who aren’t in a position to defend themselves.
More to the point, how do you think a homosexual member of the New England Patriots would feel upon seeing Spikes’ tweets? Undoubtedly, it’s this kind of behavior that makes the likely dozens of gay athletes in major league sports continue to hide their identity, and struggle with being honest about their identity in a locker room situation which is supposed to be about teammates and camaraderie.
And, unfortunately, Spikes is just one of a multitude of athletes who have taken on the role of anti-gay bully.
Hunter, for all the credit he’s gotten over the course of his career as a clubhouse leader, didn’t show much leadership to a potentially gay teammate when the outfielder said he’d be uncomfortable with a homosexual in the locker room. Likewise, for Pacquiao, who gave the ultimate of non-apologies, saying that he doesn’t actually hate gay people, he just believes their love is sinful and will be punished by his god with eternal damnation.
Really, we could go on and on, but the message is simple: Every time an athlete espouses their anti-gay rhetoric, it does much, much more harm to the comfort level of a gay athlete than all the supportive words (such as those received by Rogers via Twitter) in the world help. And there are lots and lots of examples of athletes making their bigotry public.
Now, the light at the end of the tunnel in this issue is that the homophobes are losing, and anti-gay views will soon (mostly) become a relic of the past along with Archie Bunker. However, gay athletes in the here and now still face an epic struggle, and it’s important to note not only just how many are probably out there, hiding their identity, but the culture that makes them hide.
Bills Fan Gets Huge O.J. Simpson Mugshot Tattoo on Upper Thigh, Took Nine Hours to Finish (Photo)
Ron Jaworski Says He’s Serious About Tim Tebow Joining Arena Football League As ‘Career Path’ Toward NFL Return
Giants Fan Catches Foul Ball While Holding Baby at AT&T Park (Video)
Michael Bourn Blows Catch, Helps Flip Miguel Cabrera’s Fly Ball Over Fence for Home Run (Video)
Bruins-Rangers Live: B’s Look to Close Out New York in Game 4 at Madison Square Garden
Senators Coach Paul MacLean Holds 20-Second Press Conference After Blowout Loss to Penguins (Video)
Adam Jones, Manny Machado Wear All-Denim Suits After Beating Yankees (Photo)
Daniel Alfredsson Says Senators Will ‘Probably Not’ Come Back to Beat Penguins
Koji Uehara Whacks Shane Victorino When Outfielder Isn’t Paying Attention During Dugout High Fives (Animation)
Geno Smith Signs With Jay-Z’s Roc Nation Sports Agency, But Stresses His Focus Will Be on Football
Providence Bruins Blow 3-0 Series Lead in AHL Playoffs, Fall to Wilkes-Barre/Scranton in Game 7
Kevin Durant’s Giant Back Tattoo Features Jesus, Angel and Bible Verse, But No Misspellings According to Him (Photo)
Clay Buchholz Able to Avoid Two-Out Trouble Early, Giving Red Sox Chance at Holding Off White Sox (Video)
Dwyane Wade’s ‘Fashion Consultant’ Planned Out All His Outfits for Playoffs Ahead of Time
Jacoby Ellsbury Remains Red Sox’ Leadoff Hitter for Now, But John Farrell Not Ruling Out Lineup Change
Report: Jacoby Ellsbury, Red Sox Haven’t Yet Engaged in Talks About Possible Contract Extension
Nationals Closer Calls Out Bryce Harper’s Outfield Positioning, Says His ’4-Year-Old Son’ Would Know Better
Terry Francona, Justin Masterson Among Many Familiar Faces Invading Fenway During Upcoming Red Sox Homestand
Derek Lowe Clears Waivers, Can Either Accept Minor League Assignment or Become Free Agent
Bill Belichick Drops to No. 2 on Forbes’ Highest-Paid Coaches List As Sean Payton Claims Top Spot
Robert Kraft Pushing for Super Bowl Bid in Boston, Providence in Near Future
Struggling Red Sox Offense Searches for Boost to Avoid Sweep in Chicago
Grizzlies, Spurs Exhibit Humility, Team Play in Western Conference Finals Without Egos
Crutches-Bound Russell Westbrook Surveys Moore, Oklahoma Tornado Damage (Photo)
Jack Edwards Says Daniel Paille’s Game 3 Goal Defied Laws of Physics (Audio)
© 2013 New England Sports Network. All Rights Reserved. All photos © 2013 Associated Press and NBA photos © 2013 Getty Images unless indicated. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of Associated Press is strictly prohibited.
All sports statistics © 2013 STATS LLC unless indicated. Any commercial use or distribution without the express written consent of STATS LLC is strictly prohibited.
Powered by WordPress.com VIP