Stuart Andrew: Those sports stars who have come out throw the spotlight on our footballers

Olympic boxing champion Nicola Adams is a role model for gay athletes.Olympic boxing champion Nicola Adams is a role model for gay athletes.
Olympic boxing champion Nicola Adams is a role model for gay athletes.
WE have made great progress when it comes to addressing homophobia in sport. There are great examples of some of our leading athletes who have felt able to come out.

I am proud to mention two from my county. The boxer Nicola Adams, whom I am proud of, said at the time that she was worried about how everyone would react, so she used to say that she was single rather than that she was with a girl. She felt like she was lying all the time, and she did not like having to do that, so, in the end, she thought, “Well, this is who I am. And if there is nothing I can do about it, why should I hide it?”

Keegan Hirst, the rugby player from Batley, said: “I tick every macho box. How could I be gay? I’m from Batley for goodness’ sake. No one is gay in Batley.”

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Those are two brave individuals who have come out and brought a bit of a spotlight on to the issue.

We notice most sharply that we have a problem when one of our nation’s most successful athletes thinks that sexism and homophobia are still huge problems in sport, and that they are inextricably linked.

Sue Day, the former women’s rugby captain, said: “If she has got physical strength or something that is not perceived to be feminine, then she must be a lesbian. If a man is gay, people think ‘He can’t possibly be good at sport because he is not masculine enough’.”

She went on to say: “There is a huge amount of sexism in sport. The men have been allowed to play sport for many years whereas the women haven’t. Sexism and homophobia are so inextricably linked.”

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The perception that Sue Day spoke of is widely expressed in sport at all levels by professionals and spectators alike. I cannot emphasise enough how welcoming and inclusive sport is becoming, and much credit for that must go to the spectators. The vast majority of fans find the shared bonds of loyalty to their team far more important than anything else, but we must aim for the best on the field as well as off it. There is clearly some significant work to do.

I do not want to be perceived as being only critical of the situation in our sports clubs and among our spectators, because I am not. There is much good practice from clubs and governing bodies and great examples of spectators working together on the issue, but we need to pull all of that work together.

One thing that triggered my effort to secure the debate was a BBC Radio 5 Live survey. One thing that struck me was the finding that eight per cent of football fans would stop supporting their team if one of its players came out as gay. Football is the one sport which thousands of people go to watch every week and is followed as a national treasure. I think, if we are honest, it is the focus of concerns about homophobia. Those concerns are not limited to football, but it does seem to have a particular problem. As I said, it is by far the biggest sport in the country so it could therefore be the leader in this area and drive change across sport and throughout society.

When that survey came out, FA chairman Greg Clarke said that now may not be the right time to come out. I am a fairly level-headed person, and I always try to give people the benefit of the doubt.

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