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A Professional Runner Comes Out
Outsports.com
Déric
Peterson, the 2001 U.S. 800 meters indoor champion, becomes a very
rare individual in July’s issue of Genre magazine: an out
professional athlete.
Having spent much of
the last few years in college at the University of Missouri, and now
running track professionally with a sponsorship deal from adidas,
Peterson takes the plunge that few before him have been willing, or
courageous enough, to take.
What makes him more
rare is that he is now an out black professional athlete. One can’t find any other
active American black pro athlete to ever come out in the media. This
helps explain Peterson’s hesitation, even after making the
commitment to the magazine to come out.
While in Los Angeles
for an interview and photo shoot for the magazine, he started to get
cold feet. Another
trailblazer, Coach Eric “Gumby” Anderson, who also wrote the
article for Genre, showed him an article from Outsports by Randy Boyd
asking, “When will black athletes come out?”
“In that Boyd
article,” Anderson says, “one of the athletes said, ‘I’m far
from homosexual,’ and that whole attitude is what inspired Déric
to say, ‘Well I’m far from heterosexual.’” Peterson’s feeling was that, if guys had a problem with
potentially being labeled gay, he had a problem with potentially being
labeled straight. That
athlete Boyd quoted was Magic Johnson.
Last month, with the
debate about whether a professional athlete could come out, many
detractors cited the probability of loss of endorsement deals as a big
factor to stay in the closet. Peterson’s
coming out is poking a hole in that argument.
What is possibly most important about Peterson’s coming out
is that he is doing so with no resistance from adidas.
While Peterson’s representative at Adidas declined to comment
for the Genre article, they also are not protesting it, and have
offered him words of encouragement.
"I
called Adidas and told them that I was thinking of doing this story,
and coming out publicly,” Peterson told Genre.
“They said, ‘Great, that's not a problem at all.’”
Peterson is taking
the plunge despite how much he relies on adidas.
This is not an athlete who already makes several million
dollars from a pro sports contract worrying about losing several other
million dollars in endorsements; this is an athlete putting his
livelihood on the line. It
is also a major athletic company stepping up to the plate and
supporting their athlete.
“The
support Déric has received suggests,” the Genre article says,
“that perhaps the fear that professional team sport athletes have of
losing their sponsorships may be unfounded."
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