Football, friendship and Asexuality – Beatrice & Dia

Beatrice (FvH Youth Panel Co-Coordinator) and Dia met through a mutual friend around 4 years ago. They bonded over a mutual love of football/soccer and baking. They also discovered they were both asexual, which was very exciting for them both as they had never met another asexual person before! They’ve teamed up to share their experiences of football and asexuality. 

Beatrice: My uncle rang me up before my 5th birthday and told me that he was going to buy me an Arsenal shirt and that meant I would have to start supporting them. As an eager six year old, I didn’t really know what he was on about, but was very enthusiastic about it. At Primary School I played football with my classmates. I was rubbish and barely kicked a ball, but it was a space where I could be social, develop friendships and just laugh a whole lot. That’s where the love of football began!

For almost 20 years, football has been a space for me to socialise and build connections. Whether that’s with old friends, new friends or family. It’s a place where I can  focus on viewing the game or playing the game and just exist in that moment.

Dia: Football (or soccer over here in the US) is definitely a place that helps foster those connections in society. That’s one of the things I love about being a supporter of the Portland Thorns. When you go to a game, it doesn’t matter where you’ve come from or what your day at work was like; the only thing that matters is you supporting the Thorns along with the 16K other fans in the stadium. Whether it is cheering for a goal, groaning at a missed opportunity, or booing the referees, there is this overwhelming sense that you aren’t alone. For the 2+ hours I’m in that stadium, I’m a part of something bigger than myself.

Beatrice: As a 15/16 year old I joined a team, alongside weekly trips to my non league club with Dad. I quickly felt daunted by the team environment. Here was a group of girls all talking about who fancied who at their school, who they were flirting with and whispers about who was a lesbian in the team. None of these topics were interesting to me. I just wanted to talk about football or talk about other hobbies and interests. Potential partners were not on my list of interests. 

Dia: High School was an equally rough time for me as well. I didn’t make our high school football team, but my best friend did, so it was really challenging to not have football be a part of my identity at school but to still be supportive of my friend. It was also super confusing because I still had romantic attraction for a couple of guys (and a couple of girls, but I didn’t recognize that until after college) but had absolutely zero interest in any type of physical intimacy. 

Beatrice: I joined training sessions for the university football team, but encountered a similar situation. This time, the team was also bonding outside of training and matches, during nights out. I had no desire to go to clubs, so felt a little isolated from the team each week, as there would be new friendships formed and new gossip to share. I know I had the power to form friendships in a different space, but I was falling out of love with playing the game and so this experience helped me drop out quicker. I felt very different from the rest of the team; as though I was missing something.

Dia: Just not having the words to describe what you’re feeling is so isolating. In high school, all of my female friends were getting in and out of relationships, so I knew I was different for not wanting the same things, but it was actually pretty easy to pretend that I did. I got really good at passing as straight and allo in high school to the point where I was even fooling myself. “Oh, I’m not in a relationship with anyone because no one here meets my standards, but the second I’m in college with so many new people, I’m sure I’ll find someone and that’s when I’ll enjoy and want all the physical acts as well.” I’m an avid reader, I knew what sex was and I knew it was supposed to feel awesome, but it took me a really long time to recognize the fact that I had never been physically turned on by anyone. And still haven’t.

Dia: As sad as it is, Tumblr was what introduced me to the idea of asexuality, and that’s when the lightbulb went on. Yes, I was able to learn about it eventually, but how awesome would it have been to know about it in high school? Or middle school? (Primary school, I think, for the UK.) Give people as many opportunities to learn about the LBGTQIA+ spectrum as you possibly can, that way baby queers don’t grow up feeling broken for not being ‘normal’ and allies know how to be supporting and accepting.

Beatrice: I was never out when I was playing football. This is mostly because I didn’t have a language for being asexual until much more recently. I was definitely uncomfortable being in an environment where teammates were talking about their partners and hook ups. I constantly feared being asked about my relationship status, because I feared ridicule. I would rehearse lines to respond with. “Oh, not looking for anything at the moment” or “Not interested in anything casual”. If I were to play football now, I would feel more comfortable sharing my asexual identity with people, although still do fade into the sidelines when groups are talking about their partners/love interests. It isn’t a conversation I have any connection with, so I leave them to it. 

Dia: For a sexually repressed society, everyone certainly does care a whole lot about who and how you have sex with someone. But again, this does make it REALLY easy to pass as allo. Is that a good thing? No, probably not, but it’s how I survived high school and college.

Beatrice: I absolutely struggle with taking up space in the queer community. I can move through society unquestioned to an extent- I just look like a person not in a relationship and to people who knew me long term, maybe that was a weird concept before I came out to them. But that invisibility you refer to is really the issue. I didn’t know there was an actual name for what I was experiencing. I matured into an adult looking around at everyone else, wondering when that would happen for me. If I had had a language for my experiences sooner, maybe I could feel more confident and at peace with my asexuality.

Dia: When I came out as ace, I learned very quickly who understood what asexuality was and who didn’t. And, to be perfectly honest, MOST people I came out to had absolutely no idea what it was. That was definitely a test, because not only am I feeling super vulnerable just by coming out but I also have to explain what asexuality is and why I identify as ace, and then answer all of their questions which basically is just defending who I am and what I feel. Being gay or lesbian or transgender is almost easier to understand, because it’s choosing one thing over another. “I don’t love them/hetero, I love them/homo.” “I am not this gender identity, I am that one.” Asexuality (and bisexuality and pansexuality and all the other ones I don’t even know because I still need to learn about them) is constantly being erased from the narrative because it is about the lack of something. So by coming out as ace, you have to defend it’s very existence.

Dia: As every LGBTQIA+ person can tell you, you don’t come out once. You have to keep coming out because our society is still stupidly heteronormative. Having a good support group definitely helps – I am supremely lucky that my family and a couple of close friends help to ‘spread the word’ when I’m either not there physically or too tired mentally. But every time I do come out, I remind myself that this is one more person who has the potential to help and support some other baby ace in a way that I wasn’t supported. If I could help just one kid not feel broken and isolated, then that’s good enough for me. 

Beatrice: My advice to universities and adult football teams is to consider the social spaces you create for team bonding. I’m absolutely not suggesting stopping going out clubbing, but I think it’s important to create a more varied social activity calendar. This is more inclusive of people who don’t drink or don’t want to go out and also gives the whole team an opportunity to socialise in a different way which could help strengthen your team atmosphere. Some people want to 

Dia: As weird as it sounds, being ace is kind of like being offside. Everyone knows that offsides is a thing that exists in football, but no one really fully understands it, especially during a game. Oh, you can look up the rules all you want, but half the time you will be incredibly confused because “how was that offsides” and then the other half of the time you will be super frustrated because “HOW WASN’T THAT OFFSIDES”. Or vice versa. No one actually fully comprehends how it works, because it’s weird and confusing and very situational, but football wouldn’t be the game we love without it. And that’s asexuality in a nutshell.

Dia: The asexual community is so incredibly amazing. I mean, come on. We’ve got cake, garlic bread, AND F***ING DRAGONS. Sign me the fuck up.

Beatrice: Can’t go too far wrong with that!

Dia (left) and Beatrice (right)

Homophobic Chanting to be Outlawed: The first baby step of millions

A government report released last week detailed plans to make homophobic abuse at football matches an illegal offence.

Released by the Department for Digital, Media, Culture and Sport (DCMS); the report stated that amendments will be made to the Football Offences Act 1991 to include homophobic chanting.

While a welcome step, you only have to look at the reaction of those outside of football to see how much of a baby step this is, with many who were unaware of the problems within football only displaying shock that homophobic chanting at football wasn’t already illegal.

It is no secret that currently no male players in English football are openly gay, with only one coming out while still playing in England in the history of the game in this country, and that was Justin Fashanu 30 years ago.

A small number of players have come out after retirement, and an organisation set up by Fashanu’s niece Amal (The Justin Fashanu Foundation) has stated a number of Premier League footballers are seeking counselling as they struggle with their own sexuality.

Former Premier League striker Marvin Sordell spoke as an ally earlier this year about homophobia within the industry when I interviewed him back in April.

Sordell, who retired from football at the age of 28 due to mental health struggles, talked about football’s handling of anything that deemed ‘different’.

While he agreed things need to change in the changing rooms too, he believes it is outside the changing rooms where the real issues would start for an openly gay footballer.

“I think it would be more accepting in that [the changing room] environment than out in public, and in the public domain to be honest,” Sordell expressed.

“I’d guess the reason a player wouldn’t come out as gay at the moment is probably more so because of the press, the media, the fans and social media. To put yourself out there as different is very difficult, particularly as a football player in this country.”

The 29-year-old also stated how he understands why many have and will continue to wait until after they are retired to come out, as they will be out of the spotlight a little bit and won’t have to play in packed stadiums every week.

“The fans will use that to get at that player, like racism is bad enough, and homophobia is a lot more accepted than racism.

“I have seen, heard and been on the receiving end of racism. That is something that is looked at as a horrible thing and people still do it, where as people accept homophobia more. Which is wrong, it is still discrimination, but if it is accepted more then it will happen more.”

It is that more accepting attitude towards homophobia that Marvin Sordell mentions which will provide the biggest struggle when attempting to police homophobia in the stands.

It is almost part of the culture that if a player goes down easy you call them a ‘poof’ or a ‘fairy’, or if a player has longer hair they look ‘gay’ or ‘queer’.

A lot of the homophobic chanting at grounds often comes under the ‘casual homophobia’ bracket which often gets played off as ‘just banter’.

A prime example of this can be found by just listening to away fans at Brighton games, which I’ve been in amongst on my away trips following my team, and this is Charlton who are one of the more progressive clubs in English football.

The feeling of sitting amongst your own fans who are chanting this causal homophobia is a very hard thing to come to terms with, especially as a still in the closet 14/15/16-year-old as I would have been at the time, which was the time period I slowly started realising my sexuality.

It basically confirmed what I had already decided that I would never come out in the footballing world, even now I am out and very confident in my own sexuality, away games can still be an intimidating prospect as much as I do love them for the most part.

That is coming from me, a bisexual cis male in a heterosexual relationship who can mostly blend into the crowd, as long as I keep a hat on to hide my hair. Which I have done ever since me taking my hat off at an away game once prompted a conversation behind me along the lines of when ‘fans started having queer haircuts like the players’.

I can only imagine how it would feel for someone who doesn’t have the same ability to blend in like I can, and even people who are a whole lot less secure in themselves than I have become.

This all begs the question of, how will it be policed when these laws are introduced? The racism protocol puts the onus on players getting the abuse to make the decisions, and even that is a broken system as it requires players to take the abuse more than once.

How does it work when it isn’t players getting abused? How does it work when it isn’t just a small minority, but a larger percentage of the crowd because it is ‘just banter’?

These, among others, are all questions that need to be answered. As this step is only the first baby steps of millions before football can truly be ‘everyone’s game’.

Written by Sam Clarke, FvH Youth Panel Communications Officer