Although billions of dollars were bet on this month’s Super
Bowl, the score of the game shouldn’t have mattered to the LGBT community.
Both the New England Patriots and New York Giants were
winners.
As the website OutSports noted, the title contenders are among
the NFL’s most gay-friendly teams.
Both have long and varied histories of supporting LGBT
issues. For example, when the Gay Bowl took place in New York, the Giants sent
a lesbian staffer to a panel discussion on being gay in the NFL. A team
spokesman told Outsports founder Cyd Zeigler that the Giants were "an
all-inclusive family that does not care about sexual orientation."
Those are not mere words. Last spring, team owner Steve
Tisch and former star Michael Strahan created videos supporting New York’s
successful drive for same-sex marriage.
Patriots’ owner Robert Kraft is at least as gay-friendly as
Tisch. Last year he spoke at an LGBT networking event. The Pats had already
become the first NFL team to sponsor a Gay Bowl. They also sent player Andre Tippett
to the opening ceremonies to speak on behalf of the team, and make the
ceremonial coin toss.
Kraft’s support for gay issues has created an environment of
openness and celebration that filters down throughout the entire organization.
Player Brett Lockett has appeared in the NOH8 ("No Hate") campaign against
California Proposition 8, and has been a vocal supporter of gay marriage.
Ziegler also notes that the two Super Bowl teams represent
states – Massachusetts and New York – that allow same-sex marriage. New Jersey
– where the Giants actually play – may soon do the same. In addition, the NFC
runner-up San Francisco 49ers offer same-sex domestic partner benefits to all
employees.
(As for Denver Broncos quarterback Tim Tebow, who last year
participated in a Super Bowl ad for the anti-gay Focus on the Family group: He
got trounced by the Pats.)
But it’s not just Super Bowl participants that – Tebow-types
notwithstanding – are moving the NFL forward on gay rights. Baltimore Raven
Brendon Ayanbadejo – hey, he played for a team that was in the conference
championship too – has been an outspoken supporter of Equality Maryland, the
gay marriage effort in that state. And he too stripped down – well, he took off
his shirt, which was plenty – to make a NOH8 statement. When a Twitter fan
wanted to know his greatest accomplishment, he tweeted back: "marriage equality
support & playing in a Super Bowl."
In a speech at the University of Delaware, Ayanbadejo told
students that hearing some negative responses to his own background – his
mother is white, his father is Nigerian – impelled him to fight for equal
rights for gays.
He added that straight allies are important, and that he has
never received backlash from teammates.
Also standing up for the LGBT community: Scott Fujita. In a
30-second "Americans for Marriage Equality" video for the Human Rights
Campaign, the Cleveland Browns linebacker said, "I’ve been married for 12 years
and I know that it is unfair to keep other loving and committed couples from
getting married and protecting their families."
"It’s just me standing up for equal rights," he told the New
York Times last year, about his earlier advocacy efforts. "It’s not that
courageous to have an opinion if you think it’s the right thing and you believe
it wholeheartedly."
Fujita too knows something about prejudice. His adopted
father, a Japanese-American, was born during World War II in an internment camp
in Arizona.
Fujita began speaking out on gay rights when he learned
about laws limiting gay adoption. Such legislation, he said, focuses on sexual
orientation, rather than finding safe homes for children. "It’s also saying
that we’d rather have kids bounce around from foster home to foster home
throughout the course of their childhood, than end up in a permanent home."
"By and large, the players are more tolerant than they get
credit for," he said. "It’s not a big issue. Some guys will think you are crazy
for believing one way, but they’ll still accept you."
The league itself is also more accepting of gay issues than
many people believe. Its collective bargaining agreement protects all players
against discrimination based on sexual orientation, and the league office
offers same-sex domestic partner benefits.
Former NFL commissioner Paul Tagliabue has been a very
public supporter of PFLAG. He spoke at a New York chapter dinner about his love
for his gay son, Drew, and Drew’s partner. Tagliabue also made a major
contribution to the organization. Last fall he and his wife donated $1 million
to his alma mater, Georgetown University, to establish the Tagliabue Initiative
for LGBT Life.
What we don’t know, though, is which gay-friendly team – the
Patriots or Giants -- Tagliabue supported in this year’s Super Bowl.
Dan Woog is a journalist, educator, soccer coach, gay activist, and author of the "Jocks" series of books on gay male athletes. Visit his website at
http://www.danwoog.com