Former NFL player Wade Davis: I went to strip club to hide being gay
Wade Davis
/ YouTube/SB Nation(CBS News) During his first training camp with the Tennessee Titans in 2000, defensive back Wade Davis was just one of the guys. He went through locker room hazing rituals. He played cards with star Jevon Kearse. He was invited to fellow DB Samari Rolle's wedding.
But Davis kept a secret in the locker room that he has only recently revealed in public - that he is a gay man. In an interview with OutSports.com and a videotaped sit-down with Amy K. Nelson of SB Nation (see interview below), Davis talked about what it was like being gay in the NFL.
"You just want to be one of the guys, and you don't want to lose that sense of family," Davis told OutSports.com. "Your biggest fear is that you'll lose that camaraderie and family. I think about how close I was with Jevon and Samari. It's not like they'd like me less, it's that they have to protect their own brand."
Davis, who also played for the Redskins and Seahawks and had a stint in NFL Europe before injuries derailed his career, said he kept his secret to protect his job. He vividly recalled a time when a Titans teammate warned him not to associate with another player who was perceived as "different" because it could jeopardize his chances of making the team. Davis said the comment "was like a lightning bolt that shot through my entire body" and it prompted him to go to great lengths to project a macho image.
"I can remember going out that night, going to a strip club, spending probably $1,500 just to make sure ... if they even had a glimmer of thought that I was gay, that I wasn't," Davis said. "I was willing to make it rain just like the rest of them were."
Davis, who first revealed he was gay to a coworker after his playing days, said his decision to come out was both "liberating" and "awful."
"(It was like) taking a scab off my entire body as aggressively and physically as I can," he said.
He said he decided to come out publicly because "there's an opportunity here to effect change in the world."
Davis now works at his "dream job" for a New York organization that serves lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender youth and he also volunteers for President Obama as an advocate for the LGBT community.
No NFL player has ever come out during his career and only a handful have revealed they were gay after retiring from a sport where homosexuality is rarely discussed. However, several players - including Davis' former teammate Kearse - said they would have no problem with having a gay teammate.
"In the game of football, it's like a war out there," Kearse said last month. "Once you get out on the field, all that stuff is to the side. You're on my side. I played in the NFL for 11 years, I'm sure there were at least one or two guys along the line that were gay."
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For starters, why is it so courageous to come out after your NFL career is over, in this particular case?
Furthermore, to me, the term gay and straight sounds more like one is better then the other, not a sexual preference.
Finally, from personal experience I can say not knowing is in the words of Paris Hilton, "That's hot."
I can't see how it makes their lives better for telling the world their business. If you want to hide being gay, then do it. If you decide not to hide it anymore, then just go out and do whatever it is you want to do. There is absolutely no reason to broadcast it to everyone that you are now doing gay things. Or maybe the purpose is to let others know you are gay and looking for action? It's embarrassing to everyone else when you tell the world how you tricked all your friends with your big secret. It's no different then telling people you had cancer for years, then coming out saying you lied about it for the past 10 years.
I met up with several schoolmates from 30 years ago who I now see are gay. Some I suspected and others I had no clue about. I'd rather assume they decided to come out gay at some point in their lives. I wouldn't want to hear about how they fooled me way back then. What purpose would it serve? All it would do is tarnish the memories I had back then. It's not like I'm going to apologize from some remark I made back then. The past is the past and you can't change anything that has happened. I would be enraged and homicidal if some friend from the past told me they have been living on some private island for the past 30 years as a millionaire, all because they stole a winning sweepstake ticket from my mailbox worth $100M. In some cases confessing about the past can get you hurt or killed.
You are right, the ideal would be that we just live our lives well and do good to others, and these distinctions and assumptions will all be behind us one day!
If I was taking a shower in a locker room and a girl walked in I wouldn't care in the least. I'm sure that she would look but be discreet about it. So why would I care if a gay guy also looked but was discreet about it. It's not like I would be interested in either of them. I don't know them.