Suspected gay mlb players
Billy Bean, openly gay ex-player who worked for MLB, dies at 60
Billy Bean, who in 1999 became the second former Major League Baseball player to come out as male lover and later became the sport's senior vice president for diversity, equity and inclusion, has died. He was 60.
MLB released a statement confirming his death. Bean died at residence on Tuesday nearly a year after he was diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia.
The California native played in six big league seasons from 1987 to 1995, making his debut with the Detroit Tigers in a four-hit production that tied a tape for a player in his first game. He also played for the Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres. He was a two-time All-American outfielder at Loyola Marymount, leading the team to the Men's College Planet Series in 1986.
Bean wrote a book titled "Going the Other Way" and was often a keynote speaker at events. He publicly came out as gay in 1999, the second former major leaguer to do so. Glenn Burke was the first, coming out to the general public in 1982.
Bean joined the commissioner's office in 2014, when he was hired by former commissioner Bud Selig to be MLB's first dignitary for
National Coming Out Day: Publicly gay pro baseball player creates support group for others
Bryan Ruby used to regularly Google "openly homosexual pro baseball player." He suspected he wasn't alone in searching for someone closeted like himself to work for as a beacon of hope so he wouldn't have to hide any longer.
Now that Google hunt leads directly to his own name, as Ruby became the only active openly gay pro baseball player in a coming-out story with USA TODAY Sports last month.
The aftermath to Ruby's coming out has been a whirlwind that's completely changed his life. While he converged his two professional identities – as a baseball player for the independent league's Salem-Keizer Volcanoes and country musician – with his personal one, he's now welcomed in a new source of identity: Role model and advocate. Ruby said he's already counseled several athletes of varying backgrounds and wants to "light a path" for others that was previously darkened.
"I've been showered with more encourage than I've ever had in my life," Ruby told USA TODAY Sports. "All the fears I had of people hating me or getting a fastball to the brain never happened."
Ruby joined NFL player Carl Nassib and
December 12, 2022 — Athlete Ally responded today to news that former Cleveland Guardians and Toronto Navy Jays pitcher TJ House has arrive out as lgbtq+, making him the third-ever former Major League Baseball player to do so. House, who joins fellow out queer former MLB players Billy Bean and Glenn Burke, came out through an emotional Facebook announce describing his journey as a closeted pro athlete, the critical importance of the recently-passed Respect for Marriage Operate, and his engagement to his fiancé Ryan Neitzel.
“To be the third MLB player in the history of the sport to arrive out says volumes both about TJ’s courage and how much work is still needed to make baseball a welcoming and inclusive space for same-sex attracted and bisexual ball players,” said Hudson Taylor, Founder and Executive Director of Athlete Ally. “We will not watch active, professional athletes in men’s sports coming out unless they know they will be guarded and supported when doing so. T.J’s announcement serves as a reminder that we need more education, more awareness and more clear allyship in baseball and beyond if we are going to reduce the barriers preventing men from coming out in prof
'It's about damn hour for this:' Bryan Ruby becomes only active pro baseball player to be out as gay
Bryan Ruby first started to realize he was different at 14 years ancient. That's when the hiding began. Along with the darkness.
He set up emotional refuge in two different parts of his persona. He's a professional baseball player, a member of the Salem-Keizer Volcanoes, which makes him much closer to a journeyman than a major-leaguer. And he's a country song songwriter, having written two songs that reached the charts, plus countless ballads in his notebook.
Yet it's Ruby's secret part of his identity that he now believes can have the biggest impact, partially because it's so foreign to the worlds of baseball and country music.
Ruby is a gay man, the only active professional baseball player at any level to be publicly out.
"I kept thinking about the petite 14-year-old me, who was scared because I'm a baseball player who loved country music," Ruby, 25, told USA TODAY Sports. "Those are worlds where people like me are told they can't belong. I'm not a hot-shot prospect. But today, you can't detect a single active baseball player who is out publicly. I want to aid create a wor
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</font><blockquote><font size="1" face="Verdana, Arial">quote:</font><hr /><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial">Originally posted by Maple Leafs:
<strong>Remember last year when a magazine dropped hints that it's gay editor was dating a major leaguer? They mentioned that it was an east coast team, that it was a well-known player, but that he wasn't the best known player on his team.
But they never mentioned who it was, so I estimate we'll never (cough, Brady Anderson, cough) know for sure.</strong></font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="Verdana, Arial"><img src="http://us.i1.yimg.com/us.yimg.com/i/spo/hs/mlb/sm/5864.gif" alt="" />
ESPN Radio has been covering the topic today. Bobby Valentine was asked in an interview in Details magazine how a gay player would be received in the clubhouse and Valentine said it wouldn't be a problem at all. According to ESPN, rumors possess been circulating that a sta