Boston Sportswriter Announces He's Gay

Queersetti

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Boston Sportswriter Announces He's Gay


By JAY LINDSAY, Associated Press Writer

BOSTON - A Boston Herald sportswriter came out as gay in a column Tuesday, saying he could no longer tolerate the "unabashed homophobia" in professional sports.


"I just got to the point where I didn't want to be silent anymore," Ed Gray, a 55-year-old reporter who has worked at the Herald for about two decades, said in an interview Tuesday with The Associated Press. "In the sports world, homophobia is tolerated."

He added: "It's the one minority that seems to be fair game."

In his column, Gray cited recent comments by New York Giants tight end Jeremy Shockey, who was quoted calling Dallas Cowboys coach Bill Parcells a "homo," and San Francisco 49ers running back Garrison Hearst, who said, "I don't want any faggots on my team." Neither was sanctioned by the NFL. Shockey said he was misquoted, and Hearst apologized.

Gray said his hope is that "major league sports address the issue of homophobia and people who make overt homophobic remarks or actions be held accountable."

Gray's primary beat is horse racing, but he has also written about the Boston Red Sox and the New England Patriots. He said he is not worried about how athletes will treat him after his column.

The column, headlined "Out and Proud," was displayed prominently on the back page of the Herald, a tabloid.

"We support Eddie and we just thought it was the right thing to do to give him the platform to express his views," said sports editor Mark Torpey.

The column was discussed at length on local sports talk radio Tuesday morning, where opinions was divided over whether Gray's column would make his an outcast. But Torpey said, "We haven't had much reaction one way or another."

"I'm out because I can't come up with a single logical reason why I should have denied myself the right to live and work as openly and freely as everyone else," Gray wrote. "Nor should anyone find a reason why an openly gay athlete should be denied the right to play a team sport without fear of becoming a target of prejudice or physical harm."

He noted that no active player in major sports has announced he is gay, though some have done so after retirement.

"Somehow, a gay teammate is only regarded as a threat if he is honest and a stand-up guy, qualities that are usually valued in team sports," he wrote. He added that any frenzy caused by an athlete announcing he is gay could be quickly defused.

"How long would a gay player be such a distraction if all of his teammates rallied around him for the whole world to witness?" he asked.

Few sportswriters are openly gay, and L.Z. Granderson, a gay sports columnist for Access Atlanta, the entertainment tabloid of the Atlanta Journal Constitution, said the machismo that is part of pro sports extends to journalists.

Granderson said there has been no negative reaction from athletes to his homosexuality. He revealed his own sexual orientation writing about competing in basketball in the Gay Games, and also in response to a group of Atlanta Thrashers hockey players he was with at a bar who asked why he was showing little interest in the women there.

He said Gray's column can help dispel the stereotype that gay people do not fit into the sports world.

"The more visible, everyday, average, non-`Queer Eye for the Straight Guys' who come out, the more diverse (the gay community) appears," he said.
 
Good article, Q. It brings a lot out that some of us don't realize.

I, being a huge football fan myself, know that in sports athletes are generally homophobic, professional players or not. I heard it all of the time in high school... even now with some of my college friends.

But, in the article when Ed Gray was talking about how no professional athletes had come out yet, I believe he was wrong... The quarterback for the 49ers, Garcia, did come out one or two years ago. Which is funny to me that Garrison Hearst would say something like that about his team. LOL It's only a matter of time before they become comfortable enough to come out... in many states it is illegal to fire someone on grounds of sexuality... there would be lawsuits all over the place.

A very interesting subject. :)
 
Forgive me, because I don't know anything about football, but wasn't there another player who came out recently, that guy who sings on the Chili's commercials? I believe he is Hawaiian or Polynesian.
 
Interesting article. The Herald has always had a decent Sports section. My guess is that it will be more of an issue for those he covers than those who read his work.
"The more visible, everyday, average, non-`Queer Eye for the Straight Guys' who come out, the more diverse (the gay community) appears," he said.
I've got to agree with this.

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MaddyBaby, I dont think jeff Garcia is openly Gay. YOu might want to check your sources on that one.

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The former Charger who is now openly Gay was a relatively minor player. After his retirement he came out and has since discussed it both int he context of sports and separate from sports.

Until an active team athlete comes forward, the situation will not have been fully played out.
 
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