Britain's most high-profile gay sportsman sets a challenge for football: time to tackle homophobia
Welsh rugby star asks why no players are happy to come out and calls on FA to kick out prejudice
Monday 30 January 2012
Latest in News & Comment
Related articles
On Facebook
Sport blogs
Manchester City top the ‘injury league’, with Manchester United bottom
The results of new research into every significant injury suffered by every Premier League footballe...
Stereotypical Germany? With the defence ‘forgotten’, think again
The blunt exposure of Germany's defensive problems in their last two friendlies has certainly served...
Top 14: The climax of the season
On this side of the Channel the nation’s best players are packing off either for their summer holida...
The former Welsh rugby captain, Gareth Thomas, has urged the Football Association to make a public statement in support of gay footballers to break down homophobic prejudice in the game.
Speaking in a BBC documentary, Britain's most high-profile, openly gay sportsman claims talented players will be frightened away from a professional career unless the sport takes action to create a more welcoming atmosphere.
"I think if the FA were to make a statement saying ... we will stamp on anything, then it would create a safer environment that's comfortable for the footballers," said Thomas, 37.
He was interviewed for a documentary Britain's Gay Footballers, to be shown on BBC3 tonight. It is presented by Amal Fashanu, a model whose uncle, Justin Fashanu, was the last openly-gay professional footballer. The former Norwich City and Nottingham Forest striker, who suffered homophobic abuse after coming out, committed suicide in 1998. In the programme, Ms Fashanu tearfully confronts her father, the former Wimbledon striker John Fashanu, about his public hostility to his brother after he revealed his sexuality. He tells her the family was "scandalised" by Justin's revelations in a series of press articles. "Cheap, dirty, horrible scandals day after day. On the front page, saying you've had sexual relationships with MPs," he told his daughter. "We have a reputation. We have a name to protect." Ms Fashanu watched a television interview from the 1990s in which her father said: "I wouldn't like to play or even get changed in the vicinity of him. That's just the way I feel, so if I'm like that I'm sure the rest of football is like that."
Justin responded by saying:"I thought he had more depth and tolerance. We had been through so much together, especially as kids."
Both Fashanu brothers were sent to a Barnardo's home when their parents split up and were later adopted by a family in Norfolk. Asked by his daughter whether he now wished he had done more to support his brother, John said that "mistakes were made" but blamed selfishness on all sides. He said: "Justin was selfish ... to come out and not care or worry about anybody else and tell the world you were gay, at a time when it was so hostile."
Later in the programme, Ms Fashanu is told by Queen's Park Rangers midfielder Joey Barton that "certain individuals within the game will discriminate against people". "He adds: These archaic figures think if they had a gay footballer there would be all kinds of shenanigans going on in the dressing room."
A spokeswoman for the FA told the programme action was being taken at "grass roots" level to tackle homophobic prejudice.
- 1 Brendan Rodgers link to Liverpool job fades as Gylfi Sigurdsson joins Swansea
- 2 Roman Abramovich persuades £50m Fernando Torres to stay at Chelsea
- 3 No surprises as Roy Hodgson submits England Euro 2012 squad
- 4 Italy's Euro 2012 squad in crisis as match-fixing rears head again
- 5 'I'm joining Chelsea', says £40m Lille playmaker Eden Hazard
- 6 Euro 2012 files: The youngsters
- 7 Club-by-club guide: Players available on a free transfer this summer
- 8 Kenny Dalglish axe scuppered Liverpool transfer reveals Mohamed Diame
- 9 Sports caption competition winners
- 10 Roberto Martinez set for further Liverpool talks over managerial position
- 1 Brazil rocked by abortion for 9-year-old rape victim
- 2 Robert Fisk: The West is horrified by children's slaughter now. Soon we'll forget
- 3 Richard Benyon: The bird-brained minister
- 4 Sex in dressing rooms and Play School presenters 'stoned out of their minds' - inside BBC Television Centre
- 5 Fat? Really? Olympic hope laughs off official’s jibe – but others aren’t amused
- 6 'Hello mum, this is going to be hard for you to read ...'
- 7 Image released of naked cannibal killed by Miami police as he ate homeless man's face
- 8 Alien: The monster returns?
- 9 Coke reveals its secret: It may need to carry a cancer warning
- 10 French in uproar over oral sex anti-smoking posters
Experience the Heineken Hub
Get free wi-fi and exclusive i content while you enjoy a tasty pint of Heineken at participating pubs.
Can you imagine a career in teaching?
Be inspired to teach - let real teachers show you how rewarding the job can be.
Playing a game-changing role during the Games
Cisco is providing the solutions for London 2012's complex IT needs.
Enter the latest Independent competitions
Win anything from gadgets to five-star holidays on our competitions and offers page.
Business videos from commercial thought leaders
Watch the best in the business world give their insights into the world of business.
Career Services
Day In a Page




