The president has come out.
No, not the president of the United States. (Though Barack
Obama does have a better bod than, say, Newt Gingrich.)
It’s the president of the Phoenix Suns. And though this is
only an NBA franchise, not the leader of the free world, a tipping point may
have been reached.
When Rick Welts revealed last month that he’s gay – in an
in-depth, insightful story in The New York Times, among other media –
reaction was almost gleeful.
League commissioner David Stern – who knew for years, but
never said anything directly to Welts, his former assistant – was strongly
supportive. The legendary Bill Russell – a mentor of sorts – told Welts he
would do anything to help. There was nary a peep from the NBA; the usual pseudo-"balanced"
news coverage, including quotes from an anti-gay player or official, was
absent.
According to Outsports.com, Welts’ announcement capped "the
gayest sports month ever." Since the beginning of the year, the LGBT sports
website has logged over two dozen coming-out stories.
They range from Boston Herald sportswriter Steve Buckley
and Olympic skater Johnny Weir (duh), to an English cricketer, a Scottish
cyclist, a Swedish professional soccer player, a Dutch racecar driver, and
several high school and college athletes and coaches.
This is not a drip-drip-drip of gay athletes. It’s an
avalanche, covering nearly every sport, level and circumstance.
No gay male athlete, currently competing in a major team
sport, has yet come out. But the cumulative effect of this way-gay year is
paving the way for that inevitability. And paving always creates a smoother
path.
That path has been smoothed too by straight allies like
Grant Hill and Jared Dudley. They filmed a public service announcement in
support of the "Think Before You Speak" ad campaign, targeting the use of
anti-gay language by teenagers. Simply, directly yet quite forcefully, the NBA
stars send a message: "That’s so gay" is passé.
Hill and Dudley play for the Phoenix Suns. Welts is their
boss. It’s unclear whether their PSA had anything to do with his sexuality, or
if they even knew. (It was taped long before his public announcement.)
But that’s immaterial. What matters is that the ad aired
during Game 1 of the Eastern Conference finals – the most-watched NBA game in
cable history. Over 11 million viewers saw a no-nonsense condemnation of
homophobia – in a venue that meant something to them.
The tipping point came closer – and the path to acceptance,
even celebration, grew smoother – when New York Rangers star Sean Avery
recorded his own video. He offered rousing support for the latest New York
state campaign to legalize same-sex marriage.
The New York Times called Avery a "fashion-conscious,
on-ice agitator." He has lived in West Hollywood and New York’s Chelsea
neighborhood. He interned at Vogue, and because of his aggressive playing
style has been voted the "most hated player" in the National Hockey League.
Yet those contradictions pale in comparison to his video’s
unequivocal message: "I’m a New Yorker for marital equality. I treat everyone
the way I expect to be treated, and that applies to marriage."
Baseball is hopping on the LGBT media bandwagon too. The San
Francisco Giants became the first professional sports team to film an "It Gets
Better" video, bringing hope to You Tube-watching gay youth while building
awareness that anti-gay bullying is not cool.
The Giants had been thinking of making a video – joining
thousands of individuals, and companies like Apple and Google in nearby Silicon
Valley. When lifelong fan Sean Chapin got 6,000 signatures on an online
petition drive in favor of the idea, the reigning World Series champs quickly
agreed.
The Giants had been stung a few days earlier when Atlanta
Braves pitching coach Roger McDowell taunted three men in the Giants’ stands
with homophobic comments and suggestive gestures.
And Welts’ announcement came just a few days after Los
Angeles Lakers star Kobe Bryant called a referee "faggot." NBA commissioner
whacked Bryant with a $100,000 fine.
So – despite all the positive signs – bumps still litter the
gay-acceptance road. Though high school and college athletes are coming out in
record numbers, many remain closeted. All the Grant Hill, Jared Dudley and Sean
Avery videos in the world may not overpower the words young players hear from
Kobe Bryant and Roger McDowell.
On the other hand, they may. Rick Welts is not a household
name, but his position – president of a successful NBA team – is powerful. When
he joins professional athletes in support of LGBT issues – uniting many sports
and many levels of achievement in a common cause – the message is clear.
And it’s not "It Gets Better." It’s "It Already Has."
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