When Jason Collins came out last month, Helen Carroll was furious.
The longtime sports project director at the National Center for Lesbian Rights had nothing against the 7-foot basketball center, who became the first still-active male athlete in a major American team sport to say "I’m gay."
But Carroll couldn’t help thinking about something that happened just a couple of weeks earlier. Brittney Griner – the top women’s college basketball player of 2013, number one WNBA draft pick, and quite possibly the best female hoops player of all time – came out as a lesbian.
Collins’ announcement was a major media event. He made the cover of Sports Illustrated. He was on the network evening news. President Obama phoned with congratulations.
Griner’s coming-out merited far less fanfare. There were few headlines. Talk shows ignored the news. The president never called.
A day later, Carroll had calmed down. She was glad for Collins, but felt badly Griner had not gotten a similar "day in the sun."
Carroll attributes the non-reaction to Griner to "the reality of sexism in this country. Men control everything."
Part of the difference in reactions may also arise from the
polar-opposite stereotypes surrounding men and women in sports. For years, it
was "assumed" that many female athletes were lesbians. At the same time, most
Americans could not believe any male athlete could possibly be gay.
According to Pat Griffin, a former coach and social justice
professor at the University of Massachusetts who now directs Changing the Game:
The GLSEN Sports Project, those assumptions are not only wrong – they’re
dangerous.
"The implication that it was somehow ‘easier’ for Brittney
to come out, because she’s in women’s sports, worries me," Griffin says. "Yes,
there are more women out as athletes and coaches. But there are still plenty
who are not. There’s still negative recruiting at the college level. The
relative silence around Brittney’s coming-out makes some people assume we’ve
won the war. Well, we haven’t."
Still, Griffin salutes the way in which Griner came out.
"She just subtly said it. That’s a great model for future athletes. It took so
much courage for her to do this at the beginning of her professional career. I
don’t want that courage to get lost."
Griffin agrees with Carroll that the disparity in coverage
of the two events has roots in male control. "The mainstream media has never
really been interested in women’s sports," Griffin says. "And when the
conversation began about gay athletes, the media was fascinated by the ‘gay men
in sports’ story. The overall coverage of women’s sports in general is abysmal.
The assumption that there are lots of lesbians in sport is a double whammy."
But it is true that female athletes have been out longer,
and in more sports, than males. Mariah Burton Nelson came out in 1976, as a
Stanford University basketball player. She played professionally and has
written six books about gender and sports.
Nearly four decades later, though, "being out takes
courage," Nelson says. She commends Griner for living courageously and being a
role model.
Nelson cites interviews with espnW, Associated Press and USA
Today as evidence that the sports world is not ignoring Griner. In fact, Nelson
says, "It would seem prurient if the Washington Post, for instance, after routinely
ignoring women’s college basketball, suddenly shouted Griner’s sexual
orientation from the front page."
Griffin does not spare the gay media, and gay sports
movement, from criticism. "I’ve seen panels about gay sports, and it’s only gay
men talking about gay athletes," she says. "Can the media focus on both gay men
and lesbians? Probably not. But LGBT sports people can. We need to keep the
spotlight on this issue, from every angle."
In addition, Griffin would like to see the focus move beyond
professional sports. "College and high school is where athletes – male and
female – are most vulnerable," she says. "I would hate to see this conversation
driven solely by ‘the first male pro athlete to come out.’"
Nelson would like to see gay college coaches included in the
conversation. "When they start being openly ‘who they are,’ THAT will be
newsworthy."
In the future, she adds, "who’s gay, who’s straight, who’s
bisexual or even transgendered will not be a big deal. That’s my goal, anyway:
to create a world where human diversity is appreciated but not surprising."
Which brings us back to Helen Carroll, and her reaction in
the hours after Jason Collins came out.
"The fact that the president and Michelle Obama
congratulated him – well, Brittney has been to the White House. She’s met
President Obama. But she didn’t get a call. That infuriated me."
A day later, she says, "I was feeling, well, every person
should be celebrated for coming out. Brittney and Jason should both get their
day in the sun."
Dan Woog is a journalist, educator, soccer coach and gay activist. His latest book is “We Kick Balls: True Stories from the Youth Soccer Wars.”