How rugby is aiming to rewrite its soundtrack on inclusivity
Homophobic language has long caused LGBTQ+ players to feel uncomfortable but the likes of Harlequins are hoping to help create a better environment from the grassroots up
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Your support makes all the difference.Devin Ibanez is reluctant to use grandiose terms like epiphany or near-death experience, but itâs hard to understate quite how profoundly one tackle in March 2017 altered his outlook. Playing for Scarborough RUFC in the seventh tier of English rugby, a shoulder caught his Adamâs apple and left him gasping for air. After being taken to A&E, where they discovered a puncture in his airway, Ibanez was told by the doctor that he was lucky to be alive. âIn that moment, I took stock of everything that was meaningful to me,â he says. âI thought about what I wanted from my life beyond rugby and thatâs when the seed was planted that Iâd become an openly gay player.âÂ
Three years later, having signed for the New England Free Jacks while constantly weighing the threat of what felt like global judgement against one manâs hope, Ibanez became the first active Major League Rugby player to come out. âSigning that professional contract felt like my ultimate career accomplishment,â he says. âI didnât want coming out to be the only part of my identity.â The response to his Instagram post was unexpected and overwhelming, a tide of support that washed away his fears of being cast as an outsider. âYou tend to only focus on the negative outcomes and almost become obsessed with them,â he says. âI didnât take time to consider the positives. Hopefully, now, thatâs one less fear someone else will have as well.â
While Ibanezâs fears were proven incorrect, they were founded in harsh truths throughout his career. At Scarborough, he had kept his sexuality secret only for his teammates to find out he was in a relationship with someone living in the small town. Soon, a âbanter cultureâ emerged, with some players making derogatory remarks, once even as Ibanez was coaching a group of children.
In February 2020, a study by Harlequins and Monash University found that two-thirds of players had heard homophobic abuse during training or matches in the space of a fortnight. It also found that 31 per cent of players didnât want that culture to change.
â[At one club] I had a coach who, if you made a mistake, would say âyou should go and play for the Ironsidesâ,â Ibanez says. âThey were the local inclusive club. Subconsciously, it gave that message that lesser players play with the gay players, thereâs a constant link being thrown around that youâre less of a man. Even though Iâve had extremely supportive teammates and coaches, the same care doesnât go into creating an environment where people actually feel safe to come out.â
At the peak of the English game, Harlequins are successfully attempting to change that. A year ago, they hosted the sportâs first Pride Game with the aim of celebrating LGBTQ+ participants and a guard of honour featured amateur players from gay-inclusive clubs like the Kingâs Cross Steelers. Recently, the Harlequins Foundation also launched an LGBTQ+ supportersâ association, becoming the first Premiership club to do so.
âOur intent has been to spark conversations so people can feel more comfortable being themselves,â says James Swanson, who has been instrumental to the project. âThe Pride Game galvanised people and gave them the confidence that theyâd be welcomed wholeheartedly. They werenât sure where to go or if there was a place for them but now they know thereâs a safe environment where they can be themselves.â
For the Steelers, the worldâs first gay-inclusive rugby club, that has always been their guiding principle. Founded over a conversation between friends at a pub in Kings Cross in 1995, they offered a sense of community bereft of the usual stereotypes that left many players feeling scared or unsupported. Back then, their inception was greeted by the tabloid headline âHarliqueensâ. Now, they are the subject of a critically acclaimed documentary that will air on Amazon Prime on Friday, charting the personal journeys of three players.
âAs Drew [a Steelersâ prop] says in the film, you can come to the rugby club and still be brutal on the pitch but then be flamboyant as a drag queen or be able to talk about mental health,â says Matt Webb, the clubâs chairman. âI think itâs helped people to realise that there are different facets to rugby. Itâs not just about toxic masculinity. We have straight players whoâve joined us because they donât like the culture at some clubs. If say theyâre a teacher and theyâre telling children to be polite and friendly, they donât feel comfortable being in an environment where language is being used that wouldnât be accepted anywhere else.âÂ
It might only be one element, but changing rugbyâs soundtrack is vital to it becoming a voice for inclusivity. âIf there is ever homophobic language used and weâre made aware of it, weâll always investigate it and take action because itâs so important to set that example,â says Sue Day MBE, a former England international who now serves as the Rugby Football Unionâs chief finance officer.Â
Even with role models like Gareth Thomas, the former Wales international, and the now-retired referee Nigel Owens, Day stresses that itâs just as important to ensure that coaches at grassroots level understand how to include players so rugbyâs next generation can benefit from a prevailing culture thatâs more open and accepting. âItâs programmes like that which weâre working hard to promote,â she says. âSo when youâre a kid at a club for the first time, itâs more talked about and relevant. It can feel like people in positions of power care about you and want to make things better. People like the Steelers have really helped to make it part of the conversation. How to include LGBTQ+ people is not a new idea, itâs on everyoneâs agenda.â
Thatâs a sentiment echoed by Webb, whoâs worked closely with the RFU, the Harlequins Foundation and the Exeter Chiefs in order to put those aims into practice. âRugby has always been tolerant, now it needs to be welcoming and inclusive and celebrate the diversity in it,â he says. âIâve been called all sorts of things on the pitch but itâs not me Iâm worried about. Itâs the 13-year-old who hears it after training. Theyâre the ones that could end up captaining England 15 years later. Youâve got to focus on the grassroots that feed into the clubs, the professionals and the England camp. If inclusion and tolerance and diversity are at the forefront of everything they do, someone can come out and be authentic throughout their whole rugby journey.â
âBy doing that, we can also take away the media sensationalism around whoâs going to be the first [active Premiership player to come out],â adds Swanson. âThen, if they want to be on that platform, thereâs an environment in place to support them.â
For much of his career, when he wrestled with the idea of coming out publicly, Ibanez doubted whether that type of welcoming structure could ever be in place. âThereâs a reason those hesitations exist but it gives me hope,â he says. âI hope other people see the response I got and think they can still be celebrated for being a talented rugby player. It is possible to come out and be celebrated and not be alienated in the way you fear.â
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