New York Daily News

Kenworthy lead delegation of

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The first openly gay male athlete at a Winter Olympics was British figure skater John Curry, in 1976. He won gold in Innsbruck, Austria, and the following morning, unbeknowns­t to him, he was outed in a newspaper story from a pre-Games interview in which he privately discussed his sexuality – not for publicatio­n, he later insisted. It came at a time when homosexual acts between men were still illegal in some parts of the United Kingdom. The media didn’t know how to handle the story, some outlets refusing to use the word, “gay.” The world, clearly, wasn’t ready for it. But it is now. Now you have slopestyle skier Gus Kenworthy and figure skater Adam Rippon, both openly gay by their own volition, posting a photo on social media of the former planting a kiss on the latter’s cheek while wearing Team USA sweaters at Opening Ceremony, with the message: We’re here. We’re queer. Get used to it. We declare open the Olympic Gaymes. Singer Rachel Platten, she of the megahit “Fight Song,” was at the USA-Russia hockey game on Saturday and was interviewe­d on the arena video board between periods. She was asked what events she plans to attend while in Pyeongchan­g.

“I’m going to see Gus tomorrow,” she said. Gus, first name only. Rippon’s eyebrows are trending on social media. Sesame Street’s Elmo shot a video with him. Actress Reese Witherspoo­n called him “reason No. 1” to watch the Winter Olympics.

These guys are the real rock stars in Pyeongchan­g.

These Olympics will be known, at least for 17 days, for thawing icy relations with North Korea; for improving transporta­tion infrastruc­ture in an underserve­d part of the country; for delivering a more financiall­y responsibl­e model for the Games without billions spent on white elephants; for returning them to a place where you actually need a parka and gloves in February.

But their real legacy, especially on the other side of the Pacific, might be the tectonic shift from tolerance to acceptance to, yes, reverence of the openly gay male athlete.

Or as Rippon said, half joking, after winning a bronze in the team competitio­n and finishing 10th in men’s singles (and breaking Twitter): “One thing that I want people to come away with from this is I’m not a gay icon or America’s gay sweetheart. I’m just America’s sweetheart, and I’m just an icon.”

Sports often have been progressiv­e agents of change, piercing the color barrier, championin­g gender equity, bridging the socio-economic divide. They have, to a certain extent, with acknowledg­ement of the lesbian athlete. They haven’t with the gay male athlete, the great taboo of the locker room.

“Sports,” LGBT website Outsports has said, “is still the final closet in society.”

Figure skater Brian Boitano won the gold while gay in 1988 but didn’t publicly confirm it for 25 years. Johnny Weir nearly came out during the 2010 Games in Vancouver, calling a news conference many thought was for that very purpose, but skated around questions and waited until the following year in his autobiogra­phy. Kenworthy and Canadian pairs skater Eric Radford both admit considerin­g it four years ago in Sochi, then thought, uh, better not. They might end up in a Siberian gulag given Russia’s draconian anti-gay laws.

Which brings us to 2018, a staggering 42 years post-Curry. There are 15 openly gay athletes in Pyeongchan­g, two more than 2010 and 2014 combined. Four are men after there were none since 1976, and two – Rippon and Radford – have already won medals. Kenworthy was among the favorites in slopestyle late Saturday night PST.

In the Summer Games, with more than three times as many participan­ts, the count of openly gay athletes has gone from 11 in Beijing to 23 in London to 56 in Rio two summers ago – and the number of men from one to four to 13. They’re here. They’re queer. Four years ago, Kenworthy was a silver medalist in an obscure event and best known for rescuing Sochi’s stray dogs. He came out in a cover story in ESPN The Magazine in 2015 and remembers his fingers trembling when he tweeted the link.

“I was literally afraid I was going to lose sponsors, lose a fan base, get dropped, stop getting invited to events,” Kenworthy said. “It’s just so crazy. It was such the opposite thing … I’m more marketable now as an out athlete.”

Kenworthy recently was ranked sixth on Business Insider’s list of U.S. winter athletes by endorsemen­t income, at $300,000. He has sponsorshi­p deals with Visa, Toyota, Ralph Lauren, Comcast’s Xfinity, Proctor & Gamble. He recently filmed a shampoo commercial with a rainbow flag.

“Every brand is looking for diversity, more than ever,” Kenworthy said. “If I had been in my same position but seen an out gay athlete who was getting big sponsors and having a successful career and doing well competitiv­ely, that would have given me so much hope and saved me so much heartache.

“All these brands want to tell my story, and my story isn’t just the story of an athlete. It’s not just the story of competing and doing well. It’s about battling the closet and other things I had to deal with as a kid … I’m actually glad they’re focusing on that, because it is part of me and visibility is what really deteriorat­es homophobia, breaks down walls and barriers.”

Rippon was a washed-up skater without a quadruple jump who willed his way onto the 2018 team at age 28, the oldest U.S. Olympic rookie in that sport since 1936. Then he criticized the choice of Vice

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