The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Nassib coming out barely a blip for unbeaten Raiders

- Paul Newberry is a national sports columnist for The Associated Press. Write to him at pnewberry(at)ap.org or at https://twitter.com/ pnewberry1­963 and check out his work at https:// apnews.com/search/ paulnewber­ry

There are all sorts of storylines swirling around the Las Vegas Raiders.

They go into Sunday’s game against Miami looking for their first 3-0 start in almost two decades. Quarterbac­k Derek Carr is playing like an MVP. The defense is much improved.

Know something you don’t hear much about? Carl Nassib coming out. Turns out, it didn’t cause a major uproar or tear up the locker room when the Raiders defensive end became the first prominent male athlete playing in a major U.S. team sport — the NFL, no less — to reveal he is gay.

After decades of hangwringi­ng over the supposed negative impact a homosexual player would have on a team’s chemistry, Nassib’s brave announceme­nt this past summer seems to have largely faded into the background.

“It’s a big story, but it’s not a story at all,” said Eric Anderson, a professor of sport masculinit­y and health at the University of Winchester in England.

Indeed, Nassib is just another valued player on a team that has big-time aspiration­s for 2021.

“Not one person, from my point of view, has treated him any different,” Carr said. “His locker is just a few down from mine, and I want to make sure that he knows that we just want him to play as hard as he can so we can win a Super Bowl.”

So, was Nassib’s comingout no big deal?

Of course not. There’s still plenty of homophobia in this world — and especially in men’s team sports, where all sorts of nasty prejudices linger just beneath the surface.

Nassib and the Raiders are, hopefully, leading us toward a more tolerant locker room in all sports.

“He’s challengin­g this idea that the identity of an athlete and the identity of an LGBTQ person do not mix and match,” said Yannick Kluch, director of outreach & inclusive excellence at Virginia Commonweal­th University’s Center for Sport Leadership.

Certainly, things have changed for the better.

When I delved into this very issue for a story in 2004, it quickly became clear that many male pro athletes were not the least bit prepared to accept a gay teammate. They openly delivered their hostility.

In the Atlanta Braves clubhouse, I encountere­d ugly resistance to homosexual rights from future Hall of Famer John Smoltz, who said, “What’s next? Marrying an animal?”

Catcher Eddie Perez took a less-abrasive but similar line, saying he would like to know in advance that he was playing with a gay teammate.

“If I knew a guy was gay, then I could work it out,” Perez said at the time. “I could hide when I’m getting disrobed.”

With gay marriage now legal and LBGTQ rights gaining widespread acceptance, Smoltz and Perez sound like relics from a far more ignorant time.

Still, it took 17 more years before someone of Nassib’s stature — not an All-Pro, mind you, but a solid player still in his 20s, with 37 starts over his sixyear career — to shatter one of the last great barriers in sports.

“It shows how homophobic U.S. men’s team sports still is,” Kluch said. “There’s still homophobic barriers in place that make the athlete feel they are not safe to show who they really are.”

Before Nassib, there were smattering of less-influentia­l breakthrou­ghs.

Michael Sam came out after playing college football, but never made it onto an NFL regular-season roster. Longtime NBA player Jason Collins waited until late in his career to reveal he is gay, playing only played a handful of games before his retirement.

Kluch is hopeful that Nassib is just the beginning of a far more substantia­l wave of gay players coming out in the NFL, NBA, Major League Baseball and NHL.

Other sports too, such as men’s tennis.

“Statistica­lly speaking, there is very likely going to be at least one gay athlete on every single profession­al men’s sports team,” he said.

Anderson challenges the notion that there are a plethora of male athletes hiding their sexuality. He said changing norms have steered many young gay males away from the socalled traditiona­l sports — especially football.

“Young boys used to partake in these competitiv­e, organized, macho team sports in order to raise their social capital, in order to raise their heterosexu­al capital,” said Anderson, who in 1993 became the first openly gay high school coach in the United States.

“What we’ve seen is not only the rapid decline of cultural homophobia, but a rapid decline of young men wanting to be associated with that type of masculinit­y,” he continued. “Young gay boys don’t have to play football now because no one cares if they are gay.”

Yet, there are players such as Jaden Vazquez, who came out as bisexual after his freshman year at Fordham, a Football Championsh­ip Subdivisio­n university in New York City. He’s now a senior linebacker for the Rams.

“I’ve played since second grade,” Vazquez said. “Football is a game you fall in love with.”

There were challengin­g times as he coped with his emerging sexuality.

“I was worried that someone was going to out me,” Vazquez said. “I didn’t want to act to feminine, especially in such a masculine sport.”

Vazquez hopes that Nassib will inspire other athletes to live openly and proudly.

“There might be younger LGBTQ athletes out there who want to play but are worried about discrimina­tion from others,” Vazquez said. “I know when I was younger, if I had seen LGBTQ athletes, I would have felt more comfortabl­e, more supported, knowing someone else had done it.”

In a season-opening victory over Baltimore, Nassib came up with the play of the game in overtime. He stripped the ball from Ravens quarterbac­k Lamar Jackson, the Raiders recovered, and three plays later Carr delivered the gameending touchdown pass.

Afterward, everyone talked about what a great play it was. No one talked about it being made by the NFL’s first openly gay player.

Kluch said it’s not surprising that Nassib made such an important play in the very first game of the season, or that the Raiders are off to such a promising start.

“The data shows it’s not a distractio­n, and it can even make a team stronger,” Kluch said. “A team usually performs better if there’s trust, if people can be their true selves.”

Nassib is being true to himself.

His teammates and coaches only seem to care what he can do to help win football games.

We’d call that a win for everyone.

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