Commentary: Swoopes made progress, but …

Male athlete coming out is next step

No one called for a boycott of the WNBA after Sheryl Swoopes announced she was gay. The league didn’t ask for any of her MVP awards back. Her sponsors still are writing her checks.

Any initial surprise has quickly turned to a shrug of indifference, and even if the WNBA is not the NBA in terms of public appeal, that reaction shows how far society has come. And how far we still have to go. While Swoopes is accepted whether she’s a wife, a single mother or a lesbian, gay men are buried deep in the pro sports closet.

“I don’t see that happening any time soon,” Swoopes said Friday about the possibility a high-profile male athlete might come out. “But you know what? I didn’t really see this happening, either. At least not now, and it did.

“I wish, as a society, as a world, that this wouldn’t be an issue anymore. Unfortunately, it is.”

Times have changed since 1981, when Billie Jean King lost millions in endorsements after admitting to a lesbian affair. Today, numerous athletes in women’s golf, tennis and basketball are open about their sexuality and aren’t punished for it. Martina Navratilova, Rosie Jones and now Swoopes even added endorsements from Olivia, a lesbian cruise line.

There also have been a few openly gay male athletes, mainly in sports like figure skating. But football, baseball, basketball and hockey remain straight man’s land. There’s never been an openly gay athlete in major league baseball, the NBA, NFL or NHL, and only a handful have come out after they’ve retired.

Sheryl Swoopes poses with the wnba most valuable player award after receiving the honor for the third time. Swoopes, shown Sept. 18 in Sacramento, Calif., recently made public the fact she is a lesbian, saying she was tired

“We’ve been socialized to put male athletes on a pedestal with regards to their manliness, their toughness, their strength, their machismo,” said Peter Roby, director of the Center for the Study of Sport in Society at Northeastern University.

“Because we’ve also been socialized to think that anything that references a less than macho image is negative or less than good, there’s created this phobia about homosexuals in a male locker room.”

When there were whispers about quarterback Kordell Stewart’s sexuality, he set his teammates straight in no uncertain terms. Mike Piazza felt compelled to call a news conference three years ago to say he’s not gay.

But the culture persists. Last year, Miami Dolphins linebacker Junior Seau had to apologize after he jokingly used the term “faggot” in describing the relationship with his teammates.

“The display of masculinity, in too many cases, is almost the essence of how we play the sport,” said Richard Lapchick, director of the Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport at Central Florida. “That does not make for a comfortable situation for an athlete to come out.”

So why should we care? Unless a crime is being committed, what an athlete does off the field is really nobody else’s business. Except that sports are the prism through which we view society.

Houston Comets player Sheryl Swoopes, left, smiles during a news conference where she discussed her homosexuality with her partner, Alisa Scott, right. Swoopes, shown Wednesday in Houston, recently announced she was a lesbian.

Real progress in the civil rights movement didn’t come until after Jackie Robinson put on a Dodgers uniform. AIDS was a disease for gay men and drug addicts until Magic Johnson announced he was HIV-positive. Cocaine was a “recreational drug” until it killed Len Bias.

Homosexuality is one of the most divisive issues in this country today, with a debate raging about a constitutional ban on gay marriage. But if an openly gay male wore the New York Yankee pinstripes or played for the New England Patriots, it would take the arguments in an entirely different direction. It’s a little hard to hate someone when he’s hitting cleanup for your favorite team.

“It will be a turning point on the discourse and will signal that homophobia is becoming a thing of the past,” said Eric Anderson, a professor at the University of Bath and author of “In the Game: Gay Athletes and the Cult of Masculinity.”

“It’s more of a benchmark of how we’re doing as an American people than sport in general.”

We’re not there – not yet. But maybe someone like Swoopes moves us a little closer. She’s a three-time WNBA MVP, the female Michael Jordan and the first player after M.J. to get her own Nike shoe. And while the WNBA still is on the fringe of professional sports, Swoopes is the highest-profile athlete to come out since Navratilova.

“I was concerned,” Swoopes said. “I can see why it would be hard for people to make that decision. Seeing the reaction has been so good, it does make me think, ‘Why the hell did it take me so long?”‘