GA Voice

Stonewall Sports Atlanta Builds a Welcoming Queer Sports League

- Sophia Ling

Read the full article online at thegavoice.com.

The flood of color-coded T-shirts catches the eye first; then it’s the friendly cheers, welcoming smiles, and vibrant queer energy that light up the lanes at Midtown Bowling. The logo gives them away; they are the Atlanta chapter of Stonewall Sports, an LGBTQ sports league.

Though the league started in 2010 in D.C., the Atlanta branch of Stonewall Sports is now one of the fastest growing chapters in the country. Founded in 2021, Stonewall Sports Atlanta started with 216 kickball members. Since then, the board has diversifie­d and the league has expanded into four other sports: sand and indoor volleyball, tennis, dodgeball, and bowling. Today, kickball has over 580 members, and the league overall now boasts more than 1,600 players.

April 12 marked the second game of the new Remixx bowling season, where players registered as free agents and were sorted into random teams. Many of the players told Georgia Voice that they were roped into joining by their friends or discovered Stonewall Sports Atlanta through Facebook pages looking for team members. Bowling Director Laura Oudenaarde­n said she noticed a call for an all-women bowling team (which ultimately prompted the creation of the Queendom, a safe space for predominan­tly women, trans and nonbinary folks to come together in a cis male-dominated area that focuses on the community they create rather than any particular gender). Likewise, Anna Cole, a four-sport athlete in the league, discovered the organizati­on through Queer Women’s Network, another Facebook group.

With the randomness of the teams came bonding and friendship. Oudenaarde­n emphasized this and the value of community, a word repeated constantly throughout the night.

“Especially with this season, I wanted people to be more social with each other,” she said.

“I feel like it’s a very welcoming place, and there’s also a very growing women and [nonbinary] and trans population here too,” Cole said. “It’s nice to have a space for social activities that’s also not entirely run by cis gay men.”

Adding diversity into leadership that had been largely dominated by cisgender white men was challengin­g. Commission­er Ronnie Few struggled to get under-represente­d groups behind their mission at first, but eventually, along with his co-founders, he tapped into bigger communitie­s and groups to find more people to support and build the organizati­on.

“I like being able to meet a lot of new people from different walks of life, and having sports where you can just connect,” Shaun Field, one of the bowlers, said. “LGBTQ nighttime spaces are diminishin­g, but if we can do things like this, that’s cool too.”

The sea of rainbow-colored shirts with the Stonewall logo is not just a symbol of team unity and community, but also a reminder for Few that he and his team have accomplish­ed something incredible.

“I fell in love with the league and what it stands for and the atmosphere it creates for people,” he said.

These success stories are Few’s favorite part of the league.

“I love when people tell me their story,” he said. “I had a player recently thank me because [of the league] they felt comfortabl­e to come to terms with their sexuality and now identify as nonbinary.”

In light of anti-trans and anti-gay bills getting passed around the country, the board is striving to work locally to diversify what Stonewall Atlanta offers. From partnering with sponsors to looking for spaces that are not necessaril­y bars so they can accommodat­e people who are sober or don’t enjoy drinking, they try to vet each space to ensure everyone is welcome. The board works to stay in touch with the trans community and to engage in continuous discussion­s on what Stonewall Sports can do to make them feel welcome, comfortabl­e, and represente­d by the league. In the past six months, Stonewall Sports Atlanta has donated $6,000 to the Trans Housing Coalition, a grassroots crowdfundi­ng project working to get Black trans women off the streets, and $10,000 to Georgia Equality.

In five years, Few hopes to see growth. He wants to see stronger and larger partnershi­ps with big name sponsors and aims to get the chance to hold the national Stonewall Sports National Tournament and Summit in Atlanta one day. But most of all, Few hopes to see the day Stonewall Sports elects a trans commission­er in Atlanta.

“We are raised to believe that [heteronorm­ative and gendered] is how it is, and this is how sports are and how they are meant to be,” Few said. “It was the same with women in sports for a long time. We need to fight for space.”

To learn more about Stonewall Sports Atlanta, visit stonewalls­portsatlan­ta.org.

 ?? COURTESY PHOTO ?? Stonewall Sports
COURTESY PHOTO Stonewall Sports

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States