A few years ago, no one was talking about LGBT issues in sports. Now,
everyone is.
Suddenly, the game that dared not speak its name turned into a
cacophony. Legit sports organizations (the NCAA; American Alliance for Health,
Physical Education, Recreation and Dance) wanted to address homophobia in
athletics. So did gay groups like GLSEN, GLAAD and the National Center for
Lesbian Rights.
Smaller organizations cropped up specifically around gays in
sports. They had names like Athlete Ally, Our Group, the StandUp Foundation and
You Can Play.
You could not tell the players without a scorecard.
Cyd Zeigler covers LGBT sports for a living. Co-founder of the very
popular website Outsports, even he was confused. And he realized many groups
were talking past – if not against – each other. Observing so much duplication
of ideas and energy, he wondered what it would take to get a variety of
organizations into the same room.
Kirk Walker, head softball coach at Oregon State University, loved
the idea. He suggested the perfect host: Nike. Walker had worked with the
company in the past and had been impressed with their gay-positive attitude.
Robert Goman, a consumer product manager and head of Nike’s LGBT
& Friends Network, was immediately enthusiastic. With the help of NCLR
Sports Project director Helen Carroll and GLSEN Changing the Game sports
director Pat Griffin, the Nike LGBT Sports Summit was born.
The first problem was keeping the June meeting to a manageable
size. "We wanted it to be a working group," Zeigler says. "You can’t do that with
100 people. We kept it to 25 so we could have real conversations."
Talk they did. Though Nike went all out as host – covering travel
costs and meals; throwing a welcome party and Pride reception at their downtown
Portland store; offering meeting space on their Beaverton campus; welcoming
Summit participants to march with the Nike contingent at the Portland Pride
parade – their real contribution was providing leaders and facilitators.
On Saturday morning – after two days together – a Nike executive
spoke up. "This is great," she said. "But you’re not thinking big enough."
Her words were electrifying. "Everyone realized she was right,"
Zeigler recalls. The group scrapped the rest of the day’s agenda, and focused
on how they could "really, really change sports in a big way," he says.
Gradually, participants focused on the idea of "champion." Though the
word now means an athlete who plays on a winning team, Zeigler says that from
the time of the Romans a champion has been defined not by trophies won, but by
actions taken.
"A champion is someone inclusive and supportive," Zeigler notes.
"We realized how important it is to drive this idea forward: that a champion
includes and supports everyone on his or her team."
The newly formed "LGBTQ sports coalition" vowed to work to achieve
several goals. They will engage each of the major American professional sports
leagues to work toward inclusion. They will try to increase the visibility of
out college athletes, coaches and allies. They will devise an "LGBTQ inclusive
model policy" for national youth and adult recreational leagues.
And they will promote a new, inclusive definition of "athletic
champion" to young athletes, while providing inclusive training resources to
physical education teachers and coaches.
"Everything we do, it’s ultimately about youth and young athletes,"
Zeigler says. "That’s something everyone agreed on."
Of course, any time over a dozen groups get together, there will be
contention. At the summit, discussions of funding were seldom easy.
"Ultimately, there’s a limited amount of resources," says Zeigler. "Groups
compete for funding. That came through very clearly."
But overriding those discussions was a more important feeling:
trust. "A lot of the people there had never met each other. Or they didn’t
understand or trust them," Zeigler says.
"Trust is a huge part of sports. You have to trust your teammates.
You have to trust a game plan. I think we really built trust among the
different groups. There’s a much better sense now of knowing when to lead, and
when to follow."
Zeigler adds, "The gay sports movement has been going on for 40
years. But I think this is the beginning of the end of homophobia in sports."
He predicts that within four years, anti-gay attitudes in athletics will have
faded remarkably.
Why four years? "That’s the length of high school, or the number of
years you play in college. It takes four years for each group, beginning to
end."
Zeigler uses one final sports analogy to sum up the good feeling of
the men and women at the Nike LGBT Sports Summit.
"Part of winning is playing well together. We’re athletes. We all
know how to win."
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 www.danwoog.com.