So
the Question is, How well do you think Sam will be accepted in the NFL?
As
always, please keep your answers brief, 50 words or fewer, and have them to me
by 9 a.m. Monday for consideration for The Page. Look forward to seeing your
answers. An article on the issue is pasted below. Have a great week! Ken
BC-FBC--Missouri-Gay
Player,885
By
RALPH D. RUSSO
AP
College Football Writer
Tolerance
is about to be tested in the National Football League.
And
Michael Sam hopes his ability is all that matters, not his sexual
orientation.
Missouri’s All-America
defensive end came out to the entire country Sunday night and could become the
first openly gay player in America’s
most popular sport.
“I
just want to go to the team who drafts me,” Sam told ESPN in an interview that
aired Sunday, “because that team knows about me, knows that I’m gay, and also
knows that I work hard. That’s the team I want to go to.”
Nobody
has ever done this before.
In
interviews with ESPN, The New York Times and Outsports, Sam said publicly for
the first time that he was gay. He said he came out to his teammates and
coaches at Missouri
in August.
Sam
will participate in the NFL combine later this month in Indianapolis and is projected to be a
mid-round draft pick in May.
“Hopefully
it will be the same like my locker room,” he told ESPN. “It’s a workplace. If
you’ve ever been in a Division I or pro locker room, it’s a business place. You
want to act professional.”
Sam
received much public support Sunday night from people throughout the world of
sports.
“I
can’t wait to cheer for whatever lucky team that drafts (at)MikeSamFootball.
Personally I hope he goes to my favorite team. The (at)Colts” tweeted Jason
Collins, the pro basketball player who said publicly last season that he is
gay.
There
also were words of caution.
Offensive
lineman Frank Garcia, who played nine seasons (1995-2003) in the NFL with the
Panthers, Rams and Cardinals, said Sam could face “huge challenges” in the
league.
Garcia
was teammates and good friends with defensive lineman Esera Tuaolo, who
announced he was gay on HBO’s Real Sports in 2002 — three years after he left
the NFL.
Garcia
said although he and Tuaolo regularly hung out as teammates in Carolina in 1999, Tuaolo
never once let on that he was gay.
“I
think a lot of guys in the NFL are going to say they will accept it, but there
are a lot of guys who won’t,” said Garcia, now a sports radio show host with
WFNZ-AM in Charlotte.
“The reality is Michael Sam is going to open himself up to a lot of criticism
and a lot of challenges. Those are challenges most gay people have to go
through, but when you are dealing with alpha males and some meatheads in an NFL
locker room it’s amplified. And there are some guys who have strong religious
beliefs, too, so he’s going to be judged. He’s going to face some things that
are going to be very difficult to overcome.”
The
6-foot-2, 255-pound Sam participated in the Senior Bowl in Mobile, Ala.,
last month after leading the Southeastern Conference in sacks (11.5) and
tackles for loss (19). He was the SEC defensive player of the year.
There
have been a few NFL players who have come out after their playing days,
including Kwame Harris and Dave Kopay.
Collins,
a 35-year-old backup center, came out after last season when he was a free
agent and was not signed this season. MLS star and U.S. national team player Robbie
Rogers also came out a year ago.
“His
courage will inspire millions to live their truth,” Rogers tweeted about Sam.
Division
III Willamette kicker Conner Mertens, a redshirt freshman, said last month he
was bisexual.
“We
admire Michael Sam’s honesty and courage,” the NFL said in statement. “Michael
is a football player. Any player with ability and determination can succeed in
the NFL. We look forward to welcoming and supporting Michael Sam in
2014.”
Sam’s
announcement comes at a time gay rights and sports have collided at the
Olympics in Sochi.
Russia’s
anti-gay propaganda law has received much attention, and criticism, because of
the games.
“By
rewriting the script for countless young athletes, Michael has demonstrated the
leadership that, along with his impressive skills on the field, makes him a
natural fit for the NFL,” said Sarah Kate Ellis, president of GLAAD, a leading
lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender advocacy organization. “With acceptance
of LGBT people rising across our coasts — in our schools, churches, and
workplaces — it’s clear that America
is ready for an openly gay football star.”
The
NFL’s sexual orientation, anti-discrimination and harassment policy
states:
“Coaches,
General Managers and others responsible for interviewing and hiring
draft-eligible players and free agents must not seek information concerning or
make personnel decisions based on a player’s sexual orientation. This includes
asking questions during an interview that suggest that the player’s sexual
orientation will be a factor in the decision to draft or sign him.
“Examples:
Do you like women or men? How well do you do with the ladies? Do you have a
girlfriend?”
Carolina
Panthers running back DeAngelo Williams tweeted: “I could care less about
a man’s sexual preference! i care about winning games and being respectful in
the locker room!”
Williams’
teammate, cornerback Drayton Florence, posted on his Twitter account: “No
comment but it can be a distraction in the locker room. At least he’s open with
it much respect!”
———
AP
Sports Writer Steve Reed in Charlotte,
N.C., contributed to this
report.
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