Blackpool forward Jake Daniels aims to remove taboo after coming out as gay

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Jake Daniels, the first professional footballer in this country since 1990 to come out as gay, wants Monday’s landmark announcement to help others come out and remove the taboo surrounding homosexuality at the highest level of the game.

The Blackpool striker, 17, bravely revealed his sexuality on television, prompting a wave of support from players across all divisions, clubs and governing bodies.

Daniels, who has known he was gay for most of his life, had initially believed that he would have to conceal his true self for fear of the reaction within football. But, with the help of Blackpool, his family, team-mates and the Stonewall charity, the teenager hopes he can inspire others. 

Blackpool forward Jake Daniels aims to remove taboo after coming out as gay

Pictured: Blackpool FC’s Jake Daniels, who is just 17 years old, has come out as gay in a televised interview and hopes to remove the taboo in football regarding gay players

Speaking to Sky Sports (pictured above), 17-year-old Jake Daniels said he felt the time was right and he was ready to come out

Speaking to Sky Sports (pictured above), 17-year-old Jake Daniels said he felt the time was right and he was ready to come out

The only openly gay man to have played in English soccer's professional leagues was Justin Fashanu, who was not active at a high level when he made the announcement in 1990. The ex-Nottingham Forest and Norwich City striker was found dead at 37

The only openly gay man to have played in English soccer’s professional leagues was Justin Fashanu, who was not active at a high level when he made the announcement in 1990. The ex-Nottingham Forest and Norwich City striker was found dead at 37

‘For a long time I’ve thought I would have to hide my truth because I wanted to be a professional footballer,’ said Daniels. ‘I asked myself if I should wait until I’ve retired to come out. No other player in the professional game here is out.

‘However, I knew that would lead to a long time of lying and not being able to be myself or lead the life that I want to.

‘I am hoping that by coming out, I can be a role model, to help others come out if they want to. I am only 17 but I am clear that this is what I want to do and if, by me coming out, other people look at me and feel maybe they can do it as well, that would be brilliant, if they think, “This kid is brave enough do this, I will be able to do it too”. I hate knowing people are in the same situation I was in. If a Premier League footballer does come out that would be amazing.

‘I feel like I would have done my job and inspired someone else to do that. I just want it to go up from here. We shouldn’t be where we are right now.

‘I know that every situation is different and that there are a lot of different factors for other people to consider that will scare them a lot, especially in football.

‘If you think you are ready, then speak to people. I know that’s such a hard thing to do, it was a hard thing for me to do, but just speak to the closest people around you, you are going to get support you need.’

Male pro footballers who have come out as gay 

The first professional football player to come out as gay was Justin Fashanu who came out in 1990.

Fashanu made his pro debut with Norwich City in 1979 and played for a handful of clubs including Nottingham Forest and Brighton & Hove Albion.

He went on to become the first black footballer to command a £1million transfer fee from Norwich City to Nottingham Forest.

A serious knee injury took him to the US for treatment and he played for a handful of North American sides before he returned to England in 1990. He then bounced from Leyton Orient to non-league Southall and then Leatherhead, a semi-pro club.

Later that year, he came out as gay, becoming the first prominent football player in England to do so.

Fashanu took his own life eight years later in a garage in London at the age of 37. 

He remained the only player to have competed in England’s top tiers to come out as gay until Jake Daniels’ announcement today.

Josh Cavallo, 22, who plays for Australian team Adelaide United, came out as gay last year to then become the only out pro in the world.

Cavallo became the first known current top-flight male football player in the world to come out as gay in October 2021.

In an emotional and widely-praised video, he said was done with feeling ashamed about his sexuality and the exhaustion of trying to live a ‘double-life’. 

‘I’m a footballer and I’m gay,’ the 21-year-old said in the clip posted on Adelaide’s social media and in a statement posted to his Instagram page, drawing support from fellow professionals across the world.

‘All I want to do is play football and be treated equally,’ he said.

Elsewhere in the sport, one of the highest-profile male football players to publicly come out as gay since Fashanu is German footballer Thomas Hitzlsperger.

In January 2014, Hitzlsperger came out as gay one year after he had retired while interviewing Die Zeit, a German newspaper.

Hitzlsperger was capped 52 times by Germany and made appearances in the 2006 World Cup and 2008 Euros.

It is a rarity in team sports for men to announce they are LBTQ+.

Former Wales captain Gareth Thomas was the first active rugby professional to come out in 2009, two years before he retired, and has become a source of inspiration across sports.

One of the most prominent gay athletes in Britain is Olympic diving champion Tom Daley who inspired former England soccer captain Casey Stoney to come out in 2014.

She is coach of the San Diego Wave after managing the women’s team at Manchester United.

The 17-year-old (pictured) is the only active openly gay male professional player in Britain

The 17-year-old (pictured) is the only active openly gay male professional player in Britain

The world of football heaped praise on Blackpool forward Jake Daniels, pictured during his senior debut, after he came out

The world of football heaped praise on Blackpool forward Jake Daniels, pictured during his senior debut, after he came out 

Impressed: Sky Sports' Gary Neville (pictured above) has praised Daniels and said that it is 'a big, big moment for football'

Impressed: Sky Sports’ Gary Neville (pictured above) has praised Daniels and said that it is ‘a big, big moment for football’

Daniels made his first-team debut earlier this month, coming off the bench during Blackpool’s final game of the Championship season away at Peterborough United. He signed pro terms with his boyhood club a day after scoring in the FA Youth Cup against Chelsea at Stamford Bridge in February and landed a sponsorship deal with adidas last week.

One of the brightest prospects from the club’s academy for years, the striker — who started out as a winger — first joined the club’s youth ranks aged seven and scored 30 goals for the youth team this season.

Daniels confided in Blackpool’s head of education, welfare and player care, Will Cowell, at the turn of the year and has received overwhelming support from his team-mates after talking to Under 18s captain Michael Fitzgerald. 

Sky’s interview was conducted last week and has been carefully managed with the player, his family and representative Billy Bingham. Blackpool have worked closely with Stonewall to support Daniels and are ‘incredibly proud that he has reached a stage where he is empowered to express himself both on and off the pitch’.

Daniels added: ‘It’s a step into the unknown being one of the first footballers in this country to reveal my sexuality, but I’ve been inspired by Josh Cavallo, Matt Morton and athletes like Tom Daley to have the courage and determination to drive change.

‘Now is the right time to do it. I feel like I am ready to tell people my story. I want people to know the real me. I am ready to be myself, be free and be confident with it all.

‘I was probably five or six years old when I knew I was gay. So it’s been a long time that I have been living with the lie.

‘At that age you don’t really think that football and being gay doesn’t mix. You just think, one day, when I’m older, I’ll get a girlfriend and I will change and it will be fine.

‘But as you get older you realise you can’t just change. It doesn’t work like that. I did have girlfriends in the past, to try to make all my mates think I was straight, but it was just a massive cover-up. In school people even used to ask me, ‘Are you sure you aren’t gay?’. And I would reply, ‘No, I’m not’.

‘I wasn’t ready and it was a struggle but I just don’t want to lie any more. It was impacting on my mental health.’

Daniels scored four goals in an Under 18s fixture against Accrington a day after coming out to his mother and sister. He commended Blackpool for their support and his news was met with overwhelming positivity last night.

A host of players and clubs have shown their support for Jake Daniels, pictured, after he came out as gay this afternoon

A host of players and clubs have shown their support for Jake Daniels, pictured, after he came out as gay this afternoon

Jake Daniels has been with Blackpool FC since he was seven (pictured for the U18 squad) and made his senior debut this year

Jake Daniels has been with Blackpool FC since he was seven (pictured for the U18 squad) and made his senior debut this year

‘My team-mates have all been so supportive about it and everyone has had my back,’ he said. ‘They’ve been asking lots of questions, they have all been intrigued and their reaction has been brilliant. It’s the best thing I could have asked for.

‘Everyone was shocked in a way and they were asking why I didn’t tell them earlier. That was a great reaction because it showed how much they cared. The captain was one of the main people I told and he also asked me loads of questions. In the end he said, ‘I’m so proud of you’. It meant so much.

‘The subject of being gay, or bi or queer in men’s football is still a taboo. I think it comes down to how a lot of footballers want to be known for their masculinity. And people see being gay as being weak, something you can be picked on for on the football field.

‘Of course I am aware that there will be a reaction to this and some of it will be homophobic, maybe in a stadium and on social media.

‘It’s an easy thing for people to target. The way I see it is that I am playing football and they are shouting stuff at me, but they are paying to watch me play and I am living my life and making money from it. So shout what you want, it’s not going to make a difference.

‘I won’t stop people from saying that stuff, I just need to learn how to not let it affect me.’ The Justin Fashanu Foundation last night praised Daniels for his immense bravery. Their statement read: ‘Jake’s announcement will come as a huge comfort to the many footballers at all levels of the game still secretly living as gay and who still feel unable to come out.

‘I truly hope this announcement marks a turning point and that other footballers, who wish to do so, feel they can talk more openly about the life they lead off the field. The sad reality is there is still a lot of homophobia in the game, at all levels.’

Blackpool and the PFA both released statements in support of Daniels, with EFL chief executive Trevor Birch saying: ‘Coming out publicly in professional football will have taken great courage and I have huge admiration for Jake Daniels’ decision to do so. This will no doubt serve as an inspiration to people everywhere and Jake has the full support of the EFL.

‘As our national sport, football has a huge role to play as we seek to promote equality of all forms. We hope that this moment helps take us forward to a time where LGBTQ+ representation at all levels of the men’s professional game is the norm.’yes

Daniels, pictured during his interview, said he realised he was gay when he was just five or six

Daniels, pictured during his interview, said he realised he was gay when he was just five or six

Josh Cavallo, who plays for Australian team Adelaide United, came out as gay last year to become the only out pro in the world

Josh Cavallo, who plays for Australian team Adelaide United, came out as gay last year to become the only out pro in the world

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