Why are most wnba players gay

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This Sparks team is in no way a playoff contender, but if Brink is fully healthy I think they could end up surprising me. 

The gay news isn’t all bad though, Emma Cannon has the cutest family in the entire universe and just seeing their photos gives me baby fever.

  • Julie Allemand
  • Emma Cannon

Seattle Storm

This Storm team was plagued by drama in the offseason.

We need that number to determine the true number. The drama!

  • Sydney Colson
  • Natasha Howard

New York Liberty

Don’t worry though, conservation of team dating stories remains with a move to bring Natasha Cloud over to the Liberty this year. Visibility begets visibility.

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These three join newly engaged lesbian star Arike Ogunbowale.

And that’s not even getting started on the basketball!

“I came into the league and was not out, so over the years I was able to truly come into myself,” Delle Donne said. Those 25 player are just a sampling of the best players across the league’s 25 year history, and doesn’t take into consideration of all the players that have ever suited up. This means that the team is full of potential 6 man of the year candidates but lacks a proven star.

People are quick to talk about it, judge it, put it down.

why are most wnba players gay

It seems like the majority of the issues were between former Notre Dame players Jewell Loyd and Skylar Diggins, a battle which Diggins must have won as she’s the one still here. And every WNBA superstar that is out now including Augustus, Griner, Bird, McCoughtry, Candace Parker, Stewart, Katie Smith, and Jonquel Jones to name a few have all spoke to the glass closet they’re working against and homophobia that they’ve experienced that have silenced them.

Gay, Black and Female

We’ve focused on coming as gay or lesbian and haven’t even approached the subject from the cross section of the multiple identities that are at play.

She’s gay.’”

Being bullied, having feelings of not being accepted for being gay or not fully coming out aren’t unique to WNBA players whatsoever. The Wubble was so active on those fronts that ESPN created a documentary about the atmosphere that was created in their own self-contained movement.

Though there is a lot of internalized and systemic homophobia in the WNBA to unpack and remove, it’s no surprise that the league goes big during Pride month.

Even after losing Betnijah Laney-Hamilton to an MCL tear, they’re still expected to win the league. The site has since removed that page.

Elena Delle Donne should feel empowered to be herself after winning the WNBA MVP twice, but she didn’t. “It’s important for there to be events during Pride Month,” Danielle Robinson said at a recent Pride Month event.

It’s not a coincidence that more players are comfortable being out about their sexuality in 2022 than they were in 1997.

Related

The WNBA celebrated their 25th Anniversary during the 2022 season. If you like great basketball, Brooklyn is the place to see it.

  • Natasha Cloud
  • Isabelle Harrison
  • Marine Johannes
  • Jonquel Jones
  • Jaylyn Sherrod
  • Breanna Stewart

Minnesota Lynx

This Lynx team is also putting together what they think could be a championship winning team.

So  after some extensive research, here is a list of current and former WNBA players that have either come out and/or living authentically as part of the LGBTQIA+ community sorted by last name.

When we say the player is “out” that means that player has officially announced their coming out, are publicly married, have referred to their sexuality in an article, or has shared their personal life on public social media (Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr, Facebook and others).

If you’re counting, there’s 30 retired player on this list – that means 46 players on our list are active.

With Elizabeth Williams back from injury and Rebecca Allen ready to ball this is a talented roster. “It’s hot in that closet also!”

The New York Liberty’s Sue Wicks was the first player to formally and publicly come out in 2002.

Byears and Wicks then Brittany Griner in 2013 paved the path for current players like Sue Bird, Layshia Clarendon, Jonquel Jones, Breanna Stewart, Diana Taurasi, Courtney Williams, Dewanna Bonner and Elena Delle Donne to be comfortable enough to come out.

We compiled this list because we know that the question of how many gay WNBA players there are and because there’s not a lot of reputable information to be had; it leads to stereotypes being perpetuated and biased opinions are taken as fact. Despite the accolades and the fact that 80% of the players are Black, the three names most mentioned by the media?