Tuesday 5 March 2013

WADE DAVIS SPEAKS ABOUT BEING A GAY MAN, CLOSETED IN THE NFL

Former NFL player Wade Davis now speaks publicly about what it was like to be closeted in the National Football League (Photos courtesy Wade Davis)

 When Wade Davis came out as a gay man last summer and spoke publicly about what it was like to be closeted in the National Football League, the news not only made waves in the NFL, but also forced his parents to deal with the fact their son is gay.

Former NFL player Wade Davis
“I grew up in the south and my family is very religious,” said the Louisiana-born Davis, who began his professional football career after attending Weber State University in Utah. “Thankfully, my mother has come full circle. She used to be very much against (homosexuality), whereas my father still refers to it as a ‘lifestyle choice.’ To be honest, my father and I are still not in a good place. But it took me 15 years to be okay with being gay, so I feel I need to give them time as well.”

Davis, a former defensive back, never cracked a 53-man NFL roster. But he was signed as a free agent by the Tennessee Titans and played in the preseason for the Washington Redskins and Seattle Seahawks before moving on to NFL Europe, where he played for the Barcelona Dragons and the Berlin Thunder.

This past weekend, Davis closed Montreal’s fifth annual Afro-Caribbean gay and lesbian film festival, Massimadi, with a free public lecture at the Imperial Theatre, where he talked about how he worked hard to maintain his “straight” cover in the NFL.

“In my football days, I was one of the guys, I was very well liked, so I had this persona to keep up,” Davis told me. “I’d even go to strip clubs with the team to keep up my image of being a strong, heterosexual, masculine man. I remember spending my (entire first paycheque) in a strip club trying to act like one of the guys.

“This pressure didn’t really come from my teammates, it was more (from) how I grew up in the south. I believed being gay meant you were weak. So I tried really hard to push against that. By the time I got to college and the NFL (at age of 21 in 2000), coming out was not even an option.”


His NFL closet took a psychic toll.

“You’re always tired,” he said. “Maybe not physically tired, but mentally. You are limited by what’s going on in your head. You’re two different people: (in public) you are the person you think the world wants to see, and when no one’s around you’re you. Pushing that real you away, hiding it in a safe place so no one will find out about it, that’s the most exhausting part.”

Davis’s NFL career ended in 2006 and today he is the assistant director of Job Readiness at the Hetrick-Martin Institute in New York City, where he teaches life skills to gay youth.

“We are the largest LGBTQ organization in the country and we also founded the (gay) Harvey Milk High School (in 1985),” the 34-year-old said. “This is the greatest job I’ve ever had because I get to help make a difference in the lives of many students. I would have died to have a gay man of colour as a role model when I was young!”

In February 2012, Davis joined the advisory board of You Can Play, an organization co-founded by Patrick Burke — son of former Toronto Maple Leafs GM Brian Burke, who also sits on the board — that is dedicated to eliminating homophobia in sports.

“When Patrick asked me join the board, I wanted to be sure I was still working on the ground, and to meet someone with the same drive and focus as myself was a blessing,” Davis said. “Patrick is brutally honest and knows there is a lot of work still to be done to get rid of homophobia in sports.”

But the times they-are-a-changing: The NFL this week said it will investigate improper questioning by team representatives about the sexual orientation of collegiate players at the league’s scouting combine in Indianapolis.

University of Colorado tight end Nick Kasa told ESPN: “(Teams) ask you (questions) like: ‘Do you have a girlfriend?’ ‘Are you married?’ ‘Do you like girls?’ Those kinds of things.”

The pressure now on a gay NFL player to come out — in essence, to become the “gay Jackie Robinson” — has never been higher.

“I think that first pro player who comes out while he’s still playing is going to be extremely powerful,” said Davis, who believes the first openly gay athlete will be a National Hockey League star. “But that player needs to be ready, not just for all the great things that will happen, but also for all the negative reactions, especially (on the Internet). He will became the face of this movement and will inevitably influence the lives of so many gay youth about what it means to be a man. I (also) think his coming out has to be for the right reasons, not because he wants to become this gay icon.”

At the end of the day, Davis believes real change will not be made by the “gay Jackie Robinsons” of the sports world, but by heterosexual players like Baltimore Ravens linebacker Brendon Ayanbadejo, who has been very outspoken about his support of gay civil rights.

“We need more straight allies,” said Davis, who is also an LGBT surrogate for U.S. President Barack Obama. “I think (when it comes to combating homophobia) that will be more powerful than any gay athlete coming out. So for me, the question is not when will a gay athlete come out, but when will big-time baseball, football, basketball and hockey players come out and say: ‘I’m against homophobia and I want all straight people to join me against this.’ That’s when real change will come.”

Different versions of this story ran in The Montreal Gazette and Xtra.

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