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EVERY male footballer in the country enjoys physical contact with men. You
can’t play football if you don’t. You have to enjoy the uninhibited
rough-and-tumble of a contact sport, the shoving, pulling, biffing and
banging. If you don’t have a relish for contact with the bodies of other
men, then you simply can’t play football.
You must also, if you play football at any serious level at all, have a deep
liking for the company of men. You must be able to enjoy the society of men,
both clothed and naked, and to relish (or at least tolerate) the
conversations associated with such goings-on. If you don’t have a taste for
these intimacies, then once again, you can’t play football.
Hardly surprising, then, that football remains an intensely homophobic
society. We live in a society in which respected public figures (in so far
as Members of Parliament can be so designated) and entertainers are
stand-up-and-be-counted gays, but football remains a world almost untouched
by the seismic advances in tolerance that have shaken society across the
past four decades.
Rio Ferdinand, that inescapably seedy figure, reminded us all of the way of
the footballing world when he called Chris Moyles, a Radio 1 DJ, a faggot
live on air. Ferdinand had the wit to apologise immediately, but the word
couldn’t be withdrawn.
Inevitably, there has been a lot of synthetic outrage at this. (The real
problem is the practice of producing radio programmes on the principle that
brains are an unnecessary affectation, but that’s just my view.) But the
fact is that Ferdinand — despite his explicit denial — demonstrated
football’s instinctive, soul-deep homophobia. This was made more vivid by
the recent incident of Paul Scholes, who called the referee a poof during
Manchester United’s match away to Benfica. Now if you held a massive inquiry
every time any footballer insulted an opponent, there would be several
hundred inquiries required after every single match.
Mind you, I have never received — or returned — as much abuse in an afternoon
in my life as I did on the one time I played polo. But no one called me a
poof. Scholes was demonstrating football’s kneejerk homophobia. Poof,
faggot, shirt-lifter: these are the worst things you can call a footballer.
This is despite — or as psychologists would doubtless say, because of — all
that male intimacy, the liking for physical contact, the acceptance of
shared nakedness, etc, etc.
Football is a male society and it actively defines itself by means of
homophobia. This is mirrored by the groups of men who follow the game,
tightly bonded male gangs who hug each other tight in drink and embrace when
goals are scored. Here’s a little hint: if they jostle you in
mid-celebration, don’t say: “Ooh, you old flirt, you and your band of saucy
boys would do anything to get acquainted, wouldn’t you?” A relish of
physical contact is essential to many sports and there seems to be a deep
need to point out with extreme emphasis that this contact, this relish, has
nothing to do with sex.
The ancient tradition in rugby union is to grapple each other in the mud all
afternoon, shower all together, get into the bar, sling arms around each
other’s shoulders and sing songs about monstrous sexual adventures with
unlikely items of equipment. It is a strange kind of male intimacy: we’re
well bonded, but it’s got nothing, absolutely nothing, to do with sex.
In football, the principle behind homophobia is much the same thing. Well —
why should it have anything to do with sex? Playing football, physical
contact and all, is not an erotic adventure, it’s a mock battle. Many people
relish physical contact with dogs and cats, but feel no need to emphasise
that this relish is not motivated by bestiality.
Nor is a conventional heterosexual nature essential in competitive sports. Ice
skating and dressage — not exactly haunts of machismo, it must be said —
have both been enriched by openly gay and bisexual men. The urge to win is
not restricted to men with a taste for women. John Curry led the way, a
skater of glorious grace and courage who won Olympic gold in 1976 after he
had come out. (If you don’t think a skater needs to be brave, then you have
never tried to skate.)
In women’s sports, homosexuality is commonplace and these days, scarcely
worthy of remark. The great Martina Navratilova was the first big name to
come out. Her father said he would rather she was a prostitute, but we move
on, we move on. Amélie Mauresmo won Wimbledon this year and was greeted with
nothing but admiration and affection. Her homosexuality was not considered a
big deal.
Most male sports, though, are homophobic. Rumours that an athlete is gay can
be destructive; Carl Lewis was hounded by such tales and was nicknamed “the
Flying Faggot”. He wasn’t, isn’t gay, but he was also rightly keen to say,
so what if he was?
Very few males have come out in any sports. The sole British footballer to
have done so was Justin Fashanu, whose desperate, short and tragic life
ended in suicide. This is not the sort of story that makes a modern
footballer think, “Well, what’s to lose by coming out?”
So much so that Ashley Cole won damages from tabloid newspapers over
implications that he was involved in a “gay orgy”. Clearly, to be considered
gay in football is not only deemed insulting but actively defamatory.
Alan Smith, the former manager, once said: “I’ve had players over the years
who were single and read books and so people said they must be gay.” Gay
rumours pursue certain players and cause occasional dramatic flare-ups
because being called homosexual is a gibe that always causes fury.
Footballers can’t be gay and yet it is impossible, among so many men, that
there are not footballers among all that number who are homosexually
inclined.
“I know at least three footballers who have had same-sex encounters,” one
voice claimed on the internet. “Sadly, neither is Beckham or Ljungberg.”
Beckham had no problems being a gay icon — so long as he was some kind of
icon, he didn’t mind. And he was a mould-breaker for football in that he was
happy to be portrayed as a gentle man of domestic tastes and a nature not
untouched by femininity. The result of this, of course, was that we got the
world clamouring for John Terry to replace him as England captain.
Football remains one of the last bastions of the old order. The changes in
society have been immense; in the 1960s, active homosexuals were committing
a criminal offence. Since legalisation in the Sixties, homosexuality has
become in most fields a thing accepted almost everywhere. Football remains a
world in which to be thought gay is potentially ruinous. Football is
homophobic and homocentric: a world of caricatured masculinity.
Which brings us to rugby league, and Ian Roberts. Roberts played for
Australia. In 1994, he came out. He then played as an openly gay figure for
the next six years. But they’ve always been tougher in rugby league. And
braver.
The Meaning of Sport
Readers can join Simon Barnes as he discusses his brilliant new book, The
Meaning of Sport, with celebrated Times writers Lynne Truss
and Sir Matthew Pinsent, on October 31 at 6.30pm at the Hong Kong Theatre in
Aldwych, London
Tickets available from: www.foyles.co.uk or by calling 0870
4202777
Simon Barnes is the multi-award-winning chief sportswriter at The Times. He also writes a Saturday column on wildlife. His 15 books include three novels and the best-selling How To Be A Bad Birdwatcher. His latest, The Meaning of Sport, was published last autumn. He lives in Suffolk with his family and five horses
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