Cape Argus

ROOT PLANTS THE SEED FOR LGBTQ CORRECTION

- STUART HESS @shockerhes­s

JOE ROOT’S reply to Shannon Gabriel’s sledging in the third Test between England and the West Indies is hugely significan­t.

Male sports are incredibly chauvinist­ic domains. “You throw like a girl”, “don’t get your panties in twist”, or “stop playing like a fag” are all very common phrases heard when men play sports, and all very wrong.

Gabriel directed a homophobic slur that has its origins in Jamaican slang towards the England captain. “Don’t use it as an insult. There’s nothing wrong with being gay,” Root replied. I hope Root’s response to Gabriel gains more traction. It’s made headlines and must continue to do so for many years.

When Steven Davies, who’s played a handful of One-Day Internatio­nals and T20 matches for England, publicly declared that he is a homosexual back in 2011, it set off many discussion­s in dressing rooms and bars around the world.

I happened to have a chat with a couple of members of the South African cricket team in that period and they all declared it would be incredibly difficult for a male sportsman from this country to publicly declare they were homosexual.

Obviously that is terribly disappoint­ing, but worse, just very sad. We have made significan­t steps as a society and in terms of the South African Constituti­on, we have laws written which grant freedoms and protection to lesbians, gays, bisexuals, transgende­rs and queers.

But there is a cavern that exists between what is written in the Constituti­on and what people experience every day. “Corrective rape” is one of the most disgusting terms I’ve ever heard and yet it is a lived horror for thousands of women in this country. It is a grim example of just how far removed this society is from what is written in this country’s laws.

Root is English and Gabriel Trinidadia­n but their verbal jousting shone a spotlight on what is a ghastly reality for many lesbians, gays, bisexuals, transgende­rs and queers.

The fact that former Indian internatio­nal and current commentato­r Sanjay Manjrekar’s only takeaway from the incident is that stump mics should be turned down is further illustrati­on about how far removed from what is ethical male sports are.

And it’s time sportsmen publicly stand up for what is right. Until this week, there was nothing to suggest that Root was some sort of ambassador for LGBTQ rights. But what he did was the right thing. He adopted a strong moral stance in the heat of sporting battle and in doing so shone a spotlight on an issue that sportsmen – with the exception of a handful of individual­s – would rather not touch.

Root has inadverten­tly started a vital conversati­on that all sportsmen need to have. It needs to start with the parents of young boys, then coaches and then among the sportsmen themselves.

“There is nothing wrong with being gay.”

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