Business Day

World Cup referee asked for chemical castration

- Agency Staff London /AFP

Celebrated World Cup final referee Nigel Owens asked to be chemically castrated by his doctor after realising he was gay, he told the BBC.

The Welshman said the pressure of refereeing the 2015 World Cup final between Australia and New Zealand was nothing compared to his own battle to accept his homosexual­ity a decade earlier.

The 45-year-old said on BBC radio’s Desert Island Discs he had attempted suicide and had been 20 minutes from death.

He came out publicly in 2007 after accepting he could not live a lie.

“Refereeing that World Cup final between Australia and New Zealand in front of 85,000 people and the millions of people watching at home, scrutinisi­ng every single decision you make under a huge amount of pressure, was nothing compared to the challenge of accepting who I was,” said Owens.

“Accepting who I was then saved my life.”

Owens said he had suffered ill health while he tried to deal with his sexuality and became bulimic at one time and hooked on steroids at another.

He told the BBC radio show’s presenter, Kirsty Young, he went to his doctor and said: “I do not want to be gay. Can I get chemically castrated?”

Looking back on his suicide attempt, which failed as police found him unconsciou­s after drinking a cocktail of whisky and paracetamo­l, he said: “I cried that night and realised: ‘I need to grow up’.”

Though he spent five days in hospital, it still took several years to summon up the courage to tell his late mother Maya that he was gay, which “felt totally alien to him” after being raised in the small rural Welsh village of Mynyddcerr­ig in Carmarthen­shire.

“I would have done anything to be ‘normal’ in people’s eyes,” he told the radio show.

He said his father, Geraint, found the revelation that he was gay, made when Nigel was 34, “difficult at first”.

However, he added: “My love for him and his love for me has not changed one bit.”

Owens said he had received lots of support from the Welsh Rugby Union and felt he had been given a “second chance”.

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