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Homos, Hookers, and
Heroes
Mark Bingham's
heroism started
on the rugby field years
By Spencer
Windes
Special to Outsports.com
I play on a gay rugby team. That's not
quite right, because there is no such thing as gay rugby. I play on a
rugby team composed primarily of gay men.
I have quite a time explaining this to
people, both gay and straight. Rugby and homosexuality are both
outside the mainstream of American life. They are both marked by a lot
of confusion about their various rules and motivations. So I end up
explaining the gay part of gay rugby to straight people and the rugby
part of gay rugby to gay people. They both usually respond with the
same glassy smile, the one reserved for lengthy explanations of other
people's strange enthusiasms. Like
homosexuality itself, the propensity to really play and enjoy any
sport lays not so much in the logic of the mind but an alchemy of
physical and emotional need. Sport has always served a deeper purpose
than mere pastime, and whatever it is that drives the masculine desire
to compete athletically, whether redirected warrior impulse, the need
for emotional validation, or the simple physical pleasure of the act,
sport is a universal human phenomenon. It
is also one that, for men especially, is heavily intertwined with
gender. Sport, like war and religion, is one of the sanctioned
places where men are allowed to show love and concern for each other.
In the army, the church and the team, the normal rules of masculine
indifference are lifted, and you are permitted to show affection for
your buddy, your brother, your teammate. Since homosexuality is
perceived by many straight men as a possible corruption of this "natural"
affection, it is in these arenas that homosexuality is most visibly
scorned and punished.
At the Winter Olympics last January in
Utah, there was not one competing athlete, not one out of 12,000, who was openly gay. There were probably hundreds who were
gay and lesbian, as Salt Lakeıs packed gay bars indicated, but not a
single one who felt that he could give an interview where he casually
mentioned "my boyfriend." In a nation less homophobic
then ever, there is not one openly gay athlete in a professional team
sport. Not one in the NFL. Not one in the NBA. The NHL. Major League
Baseball. None.
Yet something is happening. Rather
than waiting for Jackie Robinson, gays are starting to colonize sports
with their own local amateur teams. Across America and abroad, teams
are forming of gay men and lesbians who wish to practice their sports
not in a gay way, but in an open one.
Mark Bingham Changed My Life
This weekend, in San Francisco,
there will be the first Mark Bingham Rugby Tournament. It will
bring together five teams from the U.S., two from England, and one
each from New Zealand and Argentina. Amateur rugby tournaments are
very common. Ruggers are famous for their love of turning up in
strange towns and making themselves at home with the host team they
hope to obliterate on the pitch. This tournament will be a typical
one, with the only exception being that most of the players, like the
man for which the tournament is named, are gay.
Mark
Bingham was the 6-f-oot-5 former rugby player at Berkeley who
helped wrest control of United Flight 93 from the Sept. 11
terrorists. Mark was a member of the
San Francisco Fog, a rugby team
formed two years ago to welcome gay men to the sport. I play on the
Fog's sister team, the L.A.
Rebellion. I joined the team after reading a story about Bingham
and rugby in the New York Times. If it weren't for Mark
Bingham, I might never have discovered rugby. In a way, Mark Bingham
changed my life. I guess thatıs what role models are supposed to do.
Our team is a mixture of experiences. Some
of the guys have played rugby all their lives, playing on teams where
knowledge of their sexual orientation would have meant their
exclusion. Others have never played team sports before, put off in
their youth by a culture of disdainful machismo that pounced on any
perceived queerness. Some are guys who have played lots of sports but
have had little contact with other gay men. For them it is a chance to
get to know guys in a non-sexual environment, to come out in a known
context. Most encouraging, for the whole "canıt we all get along"
prospect, is that some of the guys aren't gay at all; they are
straight guys who like playing on our teams, who think we are a good
bunch of fellows; who like that, unlike straight teams, they can bring
their wives or girlfriends to our after-match socials (We still sing
the same bawdy songs, of course, but we change the pronouns).
What is most surprising is how not
gay the teams are. Sure, on Derby Weekend we had mint juleps after
practice (yes, we had beer as well). And one straight player recently
had to remind us that a team social should be called a bar-be-que, not
a potluck. Still, there is no higher level of the homoerotic present
on gay sports teams; if anything, there is less. The hazing and
double-entendres are different, but we are a team first. Some people
who I tell of my gay rugby team probably still think of how a queer is
supposed to throw a ball. But the whole point of gay-friendly sports
teams is that a queer can throw a ball just like anyone else. The
radical egalitarianism of the sports field is what gay athletes crave.
In a world where discrimination happens, in a match the only
discrimination is winners and losers.
Gay Teams in a Straight League
The Washington Renegades Rugby Club played
their first season of regular regulation play last year. They did not
win a match. As a new team, this is not unusual. But while they were
performing quite poorly early in the season, their play improved,
until they barely lost a squeaker to the best team in their Level
Three league. Their next two opponents forfeited. "They
were both weak teams we would have beaten had we played them,"
said one highly experienced player, whose name I won't use because he
is an officer in the armed forces, and playing on a gay rugby team is
exactly the sort of "appearance of homosexuality" that is
grounds for dismissal under the "Donıt Ask, Donıt Tell"
policy. "Neither of them wanted to be the first team on the
league to lose to the homos. Once we win our first game this coming
season though, that'll probably change." The
San Francisco Fog are in their first regulation season this year.
"The response of other teams in the league has been great"
said team captain Derrick Mickle. "They have been very
encouraging. The whole gay thing hasnıt been an issue."
Irreparative Therapy
In the discredited school of psychology
known as Reparative Therapy, it is postulated that homosexuality
arises when boys are excluded from the normal rituals that socialize
them into being men. They then seek a substitute for this
socialization in the ritual of homosexual sex. While this kind of
warmed-over Freudianism may or may not have any truth to it, it has
spawned some interesting consequences as counselors, mostly
conservative Christians, seek to treat homosexuality through a kind of
gender therapy. For women, this might mean learning to dress and
comport yourself like a lady (never mind the whole lipstick lesbian
thing). For a gay man, this means doing manly things. Which means
sports.
They will take a bunch of guys out on a
baseball diamond and teach them how to field a pop fly. By learning to
swing a bat, it is hoped that these young men will receive enough male
bonding in a wholesome way to make up for wanting it in an unwholesome
one.
If this theory worked well, gay sports
teams would soon write themselves out of existence. But of course it
doesn't work. When I was in the closet, I only practiced solitary
sports. I never would have joined a team sport, for the proximity to
other males, the need in the sport to touch them, created far too much
stress. Since coming out, that stress has evaporated. I feel more
comfortable with other men. I do bond with my fellow players, bond in
a way that is wholesome and non-sexual. But this does not change my
sexual desire. It only increases my prospective dating pool. From what
I hear, this is also true of the reparative therapy programs.
The Greeks Had It
Rugby is not a sport traditionally
associated with homosexuality. There is not a "gay problem"
in rugby like there is in women's golf or men's gymnastics. Instead,
it is a sport that has a well-deserved roughneck reputation. It
requires and rewards a kind of physical toughness and aggressiveness
that straights, and many gays, consider anything but queer.
Which is strange. The larger cultural view
of homosexuality is tied firmly to effeminacy. But of course
they are not the same things. Effeminacy, which may be as set in blood
and experience as sexual orientation, is it's own unique phenomenon.
Many effeminate friends of mine are straight (and usually married to
beautiful women), but many effeminate men are gay. There is some
connection between the two, of course. For some gay men, accepting
their homosexuality has meant also accepting their effeminacy,
embracing it like a new language, a way to broadcast who they are. But
many gay men are no more enticed towards effeminacy then they are
towards being French. Witness the code language of gay personal ads,
where the abbreviation S/A has become a popular, if ironic, adjective.
It means Straight Acting.
The oft-cited Greeks considered
homosexuality not a lack of masculinity but a surfeit of it. Gay men
are men who worship masculinity in a way. It is no wonder they want to
find a legitimate place in the most masculine institutions in American
life. There is nothing sordid in this desire. It is the same
desire that drives most boys into sport, the desire to compete with
and mold themselves against others, the desire to be the strongest,
fastest, or toughest boy on the block.
Heroes
Mark Bingham and his fellow travelers are
unequivocal American heroes. Mark is already undergoing the type of
mythologizing that creates legends. Stories abound: the time he
wrestled a gun from a mugger's hand, when he was gored at Pamplona,
the remarkable things he did on the Rugby pitch. He was named Man Of
The Year by the Advocate magazine. Of course the gay rugby
invitational would be named after him. He broke the backs of so many
ridiculous arguments about gays in sports. Heroes in American culture
are not princes. They are normal people with one moment to be brave.
He was.
Some day soon the story will come out
about a pro athlete, a quarterback or shortstop or center, some
millionaire rookie with an iron-clad contract and a Nike deal, who
will also have his moment to be brave. All it might take is holding
his boyfriendıs hand at the grocery store. There will be a fury.
People will have opinions. And then it will pass and all seem silly in
retrospective.
Maybe some day there will even be a
backlash, like there has been against blacks, because there will be so
many openly gay athletes. Who knows. But when that day comes, one
thing will most likely be the same. Rugby will still be a quirky,
minor, overlooked sport in America. The U.S. rugby team will still
hover in the basement of the international rankings, behind Fiji and
Tonga. And every year rugby teams will gather, teams composed of a lot
of gay men, and we'll play and we'll hurt each other and at the end
we'll gather in some bar and raise pitchers of beer and toast a man
few of us ever knew. We'll do so not because that's what gays do, but
because that's what sports teams do. We create heroes, something that
every boy, gay or not, wants desperately to be.
Spencer Windes plays on the L.A.
Rebellion rugby team.
June 23, 2002
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