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Once paralyzed, gay rower eyes London

Former D.C. resident training for Paralympic Games

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Jason Beagle was paralyzed from the waist after a 1994 car accident. (Photo by M.V. Jantzen)

In 1994, Jason Beagle was in a car accident that left him with shattered vertebrae, paralyzed from the waist down. Spinal fusion and many months of therapy enabled Beagle to regain the use of his legs.

Eventually, he was able to walk without a cane but still had to deal with physical limitations and some paralysis. After moving to D.C. to pursue work as a director at the Shakespeare Theatre, Beagle decided to test his body and joined the LGBT sports team, Chesapeake and Potomac Softball (CAPS).

“I wanted to try a sport that I had played before the accident,” said Beagle. “It turned out that softball was a little bit beyond my limits.”

In 2007, he joined another LGBT sports team, the DC Strokes Rowing Club (DCSRC) and entered the “Learn to Row” program. Beagle ended up falling in love with the sport and went on to compete in rowing regattas with the team and eventually became president of the club.

With the encouragement of DCSRC Coach Patrick Johnson, Beagle joined Capital Adaptive which was a new program offered by the Capital Rowing Club. Capital Adaptive was formed to introduce the Washington area’s population of disabled military veterans and civilians to the sport of rowing.

“I wanted to see what it was like to row with other athletes with disabilities,” says Beagle.  “I was classified as an adaptive rower with functional use of his legs, trunk and arms (LTA).”

At the start of 2011, Beagle received an email from U.S. Rowing Coach, Karen Lewis, inviting him to a development camp at the Oklahoma City National High Performance Center (OKC-NHPC).  At the conclusion of the development camp, he was invited to the international selection camp for adaptive rowers to be contested in June 2011.

With only 10 weeks to train, and along with help from the DC Strokes and Capital Adaptive, Beagle adopted a high performance training program that consisted of four hours of rowing a day along with his 45-hour work week.

Beagle ended up losing his seat race at the selection camp and returned to D.C. disappointed, but committed to the sport of rowing. He continued racing with the DC Strokes and competed in several adaptive rowing sprint races.

In July 2011, Beagle received another invitation from Coach Karen Lewis. This one was an invitation to consider moving to Oklahoma City and applying for residency at the OKC-NHPC.  After several weeks of consideration and a trip to Oklahoma City for the U.S. Master’s National Championships, Beagle decided to take the plunge and his application for residency was accepted.

In December 2011, Beagle quit his job in D.C., packed up his car and moved to Oklahoma City. He is now in residence with more than 20 high performance rowers at the OKC-NHPC, which includes adaptive rowers and able-bodied rowers.

At the 2008 Beijing Paralympics, rowing was added to the sports lineup for the first time. As designated by FISA, the international rowing federation, there are three categories in Paralympic rowing. Arms only (A), Trunk and Arms (TA) and Legs, Trunk and Arms (LTA).

Beagle is now in heavy training for a chance to compete for the USA at the 2012 London Paralympics. A typical day for Beagle consists of 12 miles of rowing in the Oklahoma River, six hours of work at Chesapeake Energy and another 12 miles on the river in the evening.

Somewhere in the course of a week he also fits in ergometer training, weight training, biking, light running and time in the indoor high propulsion rowing tank.

All the hard training has given Beagle some incredible results. “My time for 1,000 meters has improved by 35 seconds,” says Beagle. “That currently ranks me second in the United States in the LTA category.”

The selection camp for the 2012 London Paralympics will be contested in Charlottesville, Va., beginning on May 25 on the Rivanna River. The United States prequalified a boat for London in the LTA category, which is a four-person mixed sweep boat (4+) at the 2011 World Championships in Bled, Slovenia.

During the course of the two-week selection camp, four men and four women will be selected to compete in seat racing. Over the course of several days, the eight rowers will rotate spots in the four-person sweep boat looking for the combination that will result in the fastest time. The final selection will consist of the fastest two men and two women.

Getting into the mindset of an elite athlete has been an interesting challenge for Beagle.  “Sometimes, because of my theater background, I feel like I am training for opening night of a play,” he says.  “I have never pushed my body this hard and am looking forward to what challenges lie ahead.”

Regardless of the outcome in Charlottesville next month, Beagle will remain at the OKC-NHPC through the 2016 Paralympic Games in Rio de Janeiro. “I am enjoying it in Oklahoma City,” says Beagle. “The LGBT community here is quite social and the various cliques seem to be very accepting of each other.”

Everyone here in D.C. will be rooting for Jason as he rows his way to London for a shot at the gold medal.

Information on local rowing is at dcstrokes.org and capitalrowing.org. Information on U.S. Rowing is at okc-nhpc.org.

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Bisexual former umpire sues Major League Baseball for sexual harassment

Brandon Cooper claims female colleague sexually harassed him

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Arizona Complex League game in 2023. (YouTube screenshot)

A fired former umpire is suing Major League Baseball, claiming he was sexually harassed by a female umpire and discriminated against because of his gender and his sexual orientation. 

Brandon Cooper worked in the minor league Arizona Complex League last year, and according to the lawsuit he filed Wednesday in federal court in Manhattan, he identifies as bisexual. 

“I wanted my umpiring and ability to speak for itself and not to be labeled as ‘Brandon Cooper the bisexual umpire,’” he told Outsports. “I didn’t want to be labeled as something. It has been a passion of mine to simply make it to the Major Leagues.”

But that didn’t happen. Instead of being promoted, he was fired. His suit names MLB and an affiliated entity, PDL Blue, Inc., and alleges he had endured a hostile work environment and wrongful termination and/or retaliation because of gender and sexual orientation under New York State and New York City law.

“Historically the MLB has had a homogenous roster of umpires working in both the minor and major leagues,” Cooper claims in his suit. “Specifically, to date there has never been a woman who has worked in a (regular) season game played in the majors, and most umpires are still Caucasian men. To try to fix its gender and racial diversity issue, defendants have implemented an illegal diversity quota requiring that women be promoted regardless of merit.”

Cooper claims former umpire Ed Rapuano, now an umpire evaluator, and Darren Spagnardi, an umpire development supervisor, told him in January 2023 that MLB had a hiring quota, requiring that at least two women be among 10 new hires.

According to the suit, Cooper was assigned to spring training last year and was notified by the senior manager of umpire administration, Dusty Dellinger, that even though he received a high rating in June from former big league umpire Jim Reynolds, now an umpire supervisor, that women and minority candidates had to be hired first. 

Cooper claims that upon learning Cooper was bisexual, fellow umpire Gina Quartararo insulted him and fellow umpire Kevin Bruno by using homophobic slurs and crude remarks. At that time, Quartararo and Cooper worked on the same umpiring crew and being evaluated for possible promotion to the big leagues.

This season, Quartararo is working as an umpire in the Florida State League, one of nine women who are working as minor league umpires.

Cooper said he notified Dellinger, but instead of taking action against Quartararo, he said MLB ordered Cooper to undergo sensitivity training. According to his lawsuit, he was also accused of violating the minor league anti-discrimination and harassment policy.

Cooper’s suit says he met with MLB Senior Vice President of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Billy Bean — who the Los Angeles Blade reported in December is battling cancer. 

The lawsuit says at that meeting, Bean told the umpire that Quartararo claimed she was the victim, as the only female umpire in the ACL. Cooper said he told Bean Quartararo regularly used homophobic slurs and at one point physically shoved him. He also claims that he has video evidence, texts and emails to prove his claim. 

But he said his complaints to Major League Baseball officials were ignored. His lawsuit said MLB passed him over for the playoffs and fired him in October. He said of the 26 umpires hired with Cooper, he was the only one let go.

Through a spokesperson, MLB declined to comment on pending litigation. Quartararo has also not publicly commented on the lawsuit.

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Brittney Griner, wife expecting first child

WNBA star released from Russian gulag in December 2022

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Cherelle and Brittney Griner are expecting their first child in July. The couple shared the news on Instagram. (Photo courtesy of Brittney Griner's Instagram page)

One year after returning to the WNBA after her release from a Russian gulag and declaring, “I’m never playing overseas again,” Phoenix Mercury star Brittney Griner and her wife announced they have something even bigger coming up this summer. 

Cherelle, 31, and Brittney, 33, are expecting their first child in July. The couple shared the news with their 715,000 followers on Instagram

“Can’t believe we’re less than three months away from meeting our favorite human being,” the caption read, with the hashtag, #BabyGrinerComingSoon and #July2024.

Griner returned to the U.S. in December 2022 in a prisoner swap, more than nine months after being arrested in Moscow for possession of vape cartridges containing prescription cannabis.

In April 2023, at her first news conference following her release, the two-time Olympic gold medalist made only one exception to her vow to never play overseas again: To return to the Summer Olympic Games, which will be played in Paris starting in July, the same month “Baby Griner” is due. “The only time I would want to would be to represent the USA,” she said last year. 

Given that the unrestricted free agent is on the roster of both Team USA and her WNBA team, it’s not immediately clear where Griner will be when their first child arrives. 

The Griners purchased their “forever home” in Phoenix just last year.

“Phoenix is home,” Griner said at the Mercury’s end-of-season media day, according to ESPN. “Me and my wife literally just got a place. This is it.”

As the Los Angeles Blade reported last December, Griner is working with Good Morning America anchor Robin Roberts — like Griner, a married lesbian — on an ESPN television documentary as well as a television series for ABC about her life story. Cherelle is executive producer of these projects. 

Next month, Griner’s tell-all memoir of her Russian incarceration will be published by Penguin Random House. It’s titled “Coming Home” and the hardcover hits bookstores on May 7.

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Applause and criticism for Staley’s trans-inclusive stance

South Carolina Gamecocks women’s coach made comments on Sunday

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South Carolina Gamecocks women's basketball head coach Dawn Staley. (NBC News Today YouTube screenshot)

If not for a conservative transphobic blogger, this moment should be a celebration of NCAA women’s basketball coach Dawn Staley and the women of the South Carolina Gamecocks.

On Sunday, they concluded their undefeated season with a decisive win and a championship title. But when Staley faced reporters before that big game, Outkick’s Dan Zakheske asked her an irrelevant, clickbait question about transgender women in sports, referring to them as “biological males.” 

Staley could have ignored the question, or stated she had no opinion, but instead the legendary coach offered a crystal clear endorsement of trans women competing in women’s sports, something outlawed in her home state of South Carolina for girls in kindergarten through college. 

“I’m of the opinion,” said Staley, “If you’re a woman, you should play. If you consider yourself a woman and you want to play sports or vice versa, you should be able to play. That’s my opinion.”

Zakheske clearly wasn’t satisfied with that declaration of allyship and Staley swiftly cut him off. 

“You want me to go deeper?” she asked. 

“Do you think transgender women should be able to participate,” he started to say, when the coach stole the ball and took it downtown on a fastbreak. “That’s the question you want to ask? I’ll give you that. Yes. Yes. So, now the barnstormer people are going to flood my timeline and be a distraction to me on one of the biggest days of our game, and I’m okay with that. I really am.” 

Staley is herself a Hall of Fame player a leading voice for diversity. 

Reaction to her comments were swift, from LGBTQ rights organizations, athletes and inclusion opponents. 

“Coach Staley simply spoke the truth that trans women are women and should play if they want,” said Sarah Kate Ellis, president and CEO of GLAAD, in a post on Instagram. “All of us can take a page from Coach Staley’s playbook as a sports leader and as a person of high integrity guided by faith, compassion and common sense.” 

A White House pool reporter revealed President Joe Biden called Staley Sunday evening to congratulate her and the Gamecocks on their championship win. But it’s not clear if she and the president, an outspoken supporter of trans rights, discussed her remarks on trans athletes. 

A number of Black leaders in the LGBTQ movement applauded Staley for taking a stand. 

“Coach Staley has always been a trailblazer, but she’s also shown that true leadership is about advancing justice and equality for everyone,” said Human Rights Campaign President Kelley Robinson. “By expressing her full-throated support for transgender athletes’ inclusion in sports, she’s sending an important message — our shared humanity matters. 

“Coach Staley showed courage and vulnerability, in choosing to answer the question and make a powerful statement of support for trans people on one of the biggest days and biggest stages in sports history,” said Kierra Johnson, executive director of the National LGBTQ Task Force, in a statement. “Not only does that make her a leader we can all aspire to like, it makes her a class act. She has etched her legacy in the history books with her play, her coaching, her heart and her smarts.”

In congratulating Staley on her championship title victory, Dr. David J. Johns, the CEO and executive director of the National Black Justice Coalition, also commended her for “her unwavering advocacy and support for transgender people in sports.” 

“In a time when transgender athetes face unjust scrutiny, discrimination and exclusion from the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics, her courage to speak truth to power and in support of inclusion and fairness sets a powerful example for us all, and is a testament to her integrity and compassion.”

The NBJC leader was referring to Monday’s announcement by the NAIA, the governing body of athletic programs at small colleges nationwide, voting 20-0 to essentially ban trans women from competing with other women beginning Aug. 1, as ESPN reported.

“It is a shocking and devastating development that the NAIA, an organization that has done so much to open doors, is now slamming those doors shut on transgender athletes,” said Sasha Buchert, Lambda Legal’s senior attorney and director of the organization’s nonbinary and trans rights project. 

“Instead of standing up in support of transgender young people, the NAIA has simply turned its back on them — permanently depriving them of the benefits of competition. Would that they had the courage of victorious University of South Carolina women’s basketball coach Dawn Staley, who didn’t miss a beat in clarifying that transgender women should be able to play.” 

However, praise for Staley’s stance was not universal. 

Riley Gaines, failed former college swimmer and paid shill for the anti-inclusion organization, Independent Women’s Forum, called Staley “entirely incompetent or a sell-out” on Fox News. “Personally, I don’t think she believes what she said.” 

Gaines has turned her fifth-place tie with out trans NCAA champion Lia Thomas into a career as a crusader against inclusion and a former advisor to the presidential campaign of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis.

Val Whiting, a former Stanford University and professional women’s basketball player, tweeted her strong disagreement with Staley. “A lot of my basketball sisters feel differently but trans women do not belong in women’s sports. It’s not fair nor safe for biological women. There has to be another solution for trans women to be able to compete athletically besides having them compete against biological women.” 

Zaksheske’s Outkick colleague, anti-trans pundit David Hookstead, also went all-in with a transphobic post. 

“Dawn Staley says she supports men who identify as women competing against real women in sports. Her view could literally destroy women’s basketball forever. Why won’t more people stand up for women?”

Hookstead then boasted that Staley blocked his account. 

Republican South Carolina Congresswoman Nancy Mace retweeted Zaksheske’s account of his interaction with Staley, calling her support of trans athletes “absolute lunacy.” That in turn won praise from Caitlyn Jenner, who retweeted Whiting and posted her thanks to Mace, along with this comment: “There is nothing complicated about this issue!” 

What is complicated is that Jenner has never explained why she has competed with cisgender women in golf ever since her transition almost a decade ago. 

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