August 2011
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BRENDON AYANBADEJO August 2011
Brendon Ayanbadejo is an African-American football linebacker for the Baltimore Ravens of the National Football League. He is also the first straight football player to come out as a strong, outspoken LGBT ally and supporter.
When expressing his views on gay marriage and LGBT rights, he says, "It's a matter of fairness... Maybe I am a man ahead of my time. However, looking at the former restrictions on human rights in our country starting with slavery, women not being able to vote, blacks being counted as two thirds of a human, segregation, no gays in the military all have gone by the wayside. But now here in 2009 same sex marriages are prohibited. I think we will look back in 10, 20, 30 years and be amazed that gays and lesbians did not have the same rights as every one else. How did this ever happen in the land of the free and the home of the brave?
Brendon Ayanbadejo has also said, "Discrimination against any group of people is barbaric."
He has voiced his opinions regarding LGBT rights in several magazine interviews, including ESPN Magazine and Men's Journal. His video in support of same-sex marriage has been heavily circulated. especially in his home state of Maryland.
Others have said of Brendon, "This is newsworthy in the sense that pro athletes normally do not even discuss issues relating to gay or lesbians, especially in the world of pro football... Right or wrong, it simply doesn't fit the macho image of tough, rugged football players.... Regardless of whether you agree or disagree with his stance on the issue, you have to admire Ayanbadejo's courage for speaking out."
LINKS:
Brendon's Blog: Same Sex Marriage, What's the Big Deal?
ESPN: Professional Athletes in Support of Gay Rights LGBT RECREATION
Sports & Leisure
LINKS:
Wikipedia: LGBT Sports Organizations
PHOENIX SUNS OWNER COMES OUT May 2011
On May 16, Rick Welts, President/CEO of the NBA Basketball team, the Phoenix Suns, announced he was gay. Welts is believed to be the first major American professional-sports-team executive to make such a declaration. No male athlete in major American pro team sports has come out during his playing career. Several, like former Utah Jazz basketball player John Amaechi, went public with their sexual orientation after retiring.
Welts, 58, said one goal was to “engender conversation about the topic, which is not discussed in our industry. The other was if there was a chance to do some good for people, young people, who are struggling with their own issues and wondering whether or not they could pursue their passions and have a chance to have a successful career, whether that was team sports or something else.”
Welts is an NBA lifer, helping create among other things, the NBA All-Star Weekend and the WNBA. He is widely respected and well-known throughout the league.
Will Sheridan, former college basketball player at Villanova, as a response to Welts' announcement, also acknowledged that he was gay.
LINKS:
Time Mag: Why Rick welts Came Out
CBS Sports: Every Athlete Has Played with Gay Guys
SOCCER COACH FIRED FOR BEING GAY December 2010
CNN reports that a women’s soccer coach at Belmont University, a Christian School in Nashville, Tenn, may have been fired from her post for being a lesbian. According to the report, the coach was relieved of her job after she announced that her lesbian partner was pregnant.
Howe told her team that she would be leaving late last week, shortly after announcing that she and her partner were expecting a baby in May. Howe had been denied permission to share this information with her team.
The university, which is treading hot water over the decision, according to Sports Illustrated, denies the accusation, saying that the coach – Lisa Howe – was planning to leave after six successful seasons and that it was a “mutual” decision. But her team’s players aren’t so sure they agree and staged a sit-in.
Members of the soccer team believe that it was Howe's decision to tell them of her impending motherhood that led to her termination. Junior Ashley Hudak told the Tennessean that, "[Howe] said she needed to resign or she was going to be fired because of the choices she had made with her life."
In an attempt to
clarify the
situation, team
captain and Belmont
junior Sari Lin
asked Strickland to
explain why the
coach was asked to
leave. "He basically
said we have the
'don't ask, don't
tell' policy and
when [Howe] told us
about the pregnancy,
it violated that,"
Lin said. "He pretty
much told me that
once the baby was
born she was going
to get fired anyway,
so it's better to do
it sooner than
later."
Outraged team members and other Belmont students staged a rally to condemn the unfair dismissal and speak out for LGBT rights on campus. Belmont alum Guy Farmer told the Vision that they hoped to demonstrate support for Howe and other gay administrators and students and to pressure the university to extend its anti-discrimination policy to include sexual orientation.
LINKS:
TRANSGENDER BASKETBALL PLAYER
Kye Allums
at Geo Washington University George Washington University junior Kye Allums will play women's basketball again this year. But he will now play the role of a brother, not a sister, to his teammates.
Everything will be the same when he takes to the court in the university's season opener later this month. Just that Allums, 21, will be identified as a man, becoming the first openly transgender player in NCAA Division I basketball.
"This means a lot," Allums said in a statement. "I didn't choose to be born in this body and feel the way I do."
The 5 foot 11 inch guard from Hugo, Minnesota, said the university has been supportive of his decision. But he will not be permitted to undergo testosterone therapy as long as he is competing.
A report last month from the National Center on Lesbian Rights and the Women's Sports Foundation provided guidance on the matter, saying that transgender student athletes "should be allowed to participate in any gender-segregated sports activity so long as that athlete's use of hormone therapy, if any, is consistent with the national governing body's existing policies on banned medications."
Robert Chernak, senior vice provost at George Washington, said the university is fully accepting of Allums decision to live as a male student.
"Kye has informed the university that he will not begin any medical or drug protocols while a student-athlete," Chernak said. "Kye will continue to be a member of the women's basketball team.
Allums grew up as a tomboy and later tried behaving and dressing the way teenage girls do, according to an interview with OutSports, an online gay sports site.
"I decided to transition, that is change my name and pronouns because it bothered me to hide who I am, and I am trying to help myself and others to be who they are," Allums said in his statement.
In his sophomore year, he began telling people he was a man trapped in a woman's body.
"I told my teammates first, and they, including my coaches, have supported me," he said. "My teammates have embraced me as the big brother of the team. They have been my family, and I love them all."
LINKS:
CNN: First Transgender Athlete to Play in NCAA Basketball
FAMOUS LGBT ATHLETES
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