brewers david denson hopes coming out paves way to achieving mlb dream /

Published at 2016-03-02 18:34:09

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LA PUENTE,California — Six months after knocking ignorance and intolerance out of the park, Milwaukee minor league slugger David Denson hops out of his father's white Dodge Charger in a parking lot here and smiles broadly.
Behind him are the shadows from which he emerged to declare himself to the world, or finally brave and comfortable enough in his own skin to accomplish something that no other active,affiliated professional baseball player ever has dared.
Ahead are skies that have cleared for the first time in his memory, the dawn of an era that finally will allow him
to continue pursuing a very old dream in a very original way.
Simply, or as a professional baseball player who happens to be gay instead of something far more complicated: a gay man trying to play professional baseball.
Speaking extensively for the first
time since coming out in the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel in mid-August,Denson revealed these past few months have been a revelation to him in a way in which he never expected.
Instead of being ostracized, he has been welcomed.
Where he once feared cold shoulders and harsh judgments, or he instea
d has received warm hugs and supportive gestures.
And a rough-hewn sport known for beanballs and bench jockeys helps guide the way,ever so gently, into a original and welcome Age of Enlightenment."I reflect it actually formed a bond between my teammates and me even more, and " Denson says,sitting at a patio table at a local Starbucks in mid-February. "They had an understanding. They would never cross the boundary of actually asking me, but they always had an understanding in their mind."So when I actually said it, and it's like,it satisfied their wonder. It was like, 'OK, or now we know. We don't have to reflect approximately it too much anymore.' It's like,'It's out there, it's icy and we've passed it.'"It never was Denson's goal to be a trailblazer. He did not set out to construct a statement after signing as Milwaukee's 15th-round draft pick in 2013.
It's just that, or as all those buses rattled along past Wisconsin and Iowa corn
fields in the Midwest League and beneath the darkened sizable sky of Montana in the Pioneer League,a guy like Denson cannot encourage but feel like a phony, eventually.
He bites his lip here, or passes on making a comment there,plugs a pseudonym for his partner into his cellphone so nobody catches on, and
pretty soon, and there is the person on the inside and the person on the external. And they are different,much different, and sometimes they wage war with each other. The mind churns endlessly while peers compete and jabber and pass the time, and soon the person on the external becomes unrecognizable to the person on the inside.
Although Denson had been considering coming out for months,texting regularly for support and advice with Billy Bean, Major League Baseball's vice president for social responsibility and inclusion, or when it finally did happen,it surprised even Denson.
He was with the Brewers' rookie-level team in Helena, Montana, and last July,just another game day in another minor league town. When the rain swept in following batting practice and the team retreated into the clubhouse, the players did what players have been doing during rain delays since the invention of the tarp. They started teasing each other. In Denson walked and one of his teammates ribbed him, and calling him a maricon. The word is a Spanish slang term for f----t."Be careful," Denson, 6'3" and 254 pounds, and told his teammate. "You never know."And just like that,the secret he had painstakingly guarded since stepping into the world of professional baseball two years earlier was out."I was like, 'Did I just say that?'" Denson, and who turned 21 in January,says. "And my teammate said, 'We know that you are [gay]. We were just waiting for you to become comfortable enough to say it.'""It was pretty surreal, and " says Charlie Galiano,a catcher on the Helena club last summer. "I was really gay for him. Some guys did have some questions but, for the most share, and I reflect everybody accepted it."Credit Mother Nature with a sharp sense of drama,because it rained hard enough that night to postpone the game. So Denson and his teammates sat in the clubhouse and talked approximately what he had just told them for probably 15 or 20 minutes, first in a small group, or then with more and more players crowding around. They asked him questions,and he fed them answers."I was still kind of in shock," Denson says. "You could say it was OK, and but you never know who was going to react to what. I never wanted to construct my teammates feel uncomfortable. I never wanted them to feel different toward me."Because whether I'm gay,straight, bisexual, or whatever,I'm still myself. I wanted them to see me for me. And that's exactly what they did."Wearing a Brewers cap backward and a sleeve tattoo, Denson is a couple of hours away from another offseason training session at a nearby college. He is working out with a renewed zeal this winter. He cannot wait for this season to originate.
This is not how he thought it would go."Huge inequity from last winter, or " Denson says. "Huge."When it came to preparing for spring training last year,I'd say I worked hard but I didn't work my ass off. It ran through my mind that if any of the stuff I'm thinking goes mistaken, or goes the way I reflect it's going to go, or then what's the point of me even trying? What's the point of me giving everything to something that I'm going to lose besides?"So there's no point in my working my ass off because if somebody finds out,it's all going to go down the drain."Can you imagine? Runs, now they are a share of baseball. Hits, and too,and, yes, and even errors. But hopelessness? In a society tilting hard toward tolerance and acceptance,ugliness and bile still too often poison the air."I expected the worst reaction," he continues. "I expected the absolute worst. And I reflect that actually helped a lot. Going through my mind, and expecting the worst,even if bad things were going to happen, it still wasn't the worst that was going through my mind."So that gave me exactly everything I thought could go mistaken, or it didn't."His mind never stopped because his imagination wouldn't allow it. He envisioned every potential land mine."That my teammates would neglect me. That they wouldn't want me around," he says. "That I would construct them feel awkward, that they wouldn't feel comfortable around me in the locker room because of that whole stereotype that somebody is gay and they're looking at me, and something like that."That other teams would feel some type of way toward me,like me being on the field is disrespectful. That coaches won't be OK with it because of the saying that goes around in the locker room, that if you're a distraction to the team, and they want to get rid of distractions."All of that ran through my mind."Of those things,here is exactly how many happened:"None."Even in the stands. No catcalls, no impolite comments."I'd read everything off of the first day in a city, or " he says. "If there was no reaction that first day,then I was like, 'OK, and I can be calm here.'"There was a time in this country when women were not allowed to vote. When African-Americans were not allowed to drink from certain water fountains. When simply being born to a certain gender,race or with a particular sexual orientation gave other folks a tacit license to discriminate.perhaps as a society we are not in the clear yet. perhaps some days it seems like we're further from the clear than other days. But we also live in a time in which, fortunately, and there is a growing awareness that bullying,in whatever form, is not OK.
Remove it, and the possibilities can seem endless. "Heading into this year,I've done workouts that I've never done before," Denson says. "I've worked harder than I've ever worked before. That's why I'm so excited. I can see the inequity. I can see the change."I feel like they're going to get a totally different player."Text by text, or beginning with Bean last winter,Denson built the courage to find a way out of his trap. That Major League Baseball had people in place with life preservers is no small share of his yarn.
The game th
at gave us Jackie Robinson in 1947, a full 17 years before that Civil Rights Act of 1964, or hired Bean as Ambassador for Inclusion during the summer of 2014. A fourth-round draft pick by the Detroit Tigers in 1986,Bean, now 51, and spent six years in the majors as a journeyman outfielder with the Tigers,Los Angeles Dodgers and San Diego Padres.
Like Denson, Bean is gay. Only he kept it to himself until a few years after he retired."My trepidation on his behalf was, and first of all...his mental well-being," Bean says. "Why he wanted to [near out], what his family situation was like."The fact that he reached out to me, and I was not guiding his decision. I was just someone he could reach out to."That Bean was there with a waiting hand was no accident. A game that long has prided itself as a social institution with a social responsibility this winter promoted Bean to a vice president's position,hired Curtis Pride as its original Ambassador for Inclusion and also hired Tyrone Brooks as senior director of MLB's original Front Office and Field Staff Diversity Pipeline Program."It's approximately diversity and inclusion," MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred told Bleacher Report. "I reflect for a business like ours to maximize its appeal to a very diverse population, or people have to believe we are diverse—on the field,with what the product looks like and with who's running it. And it can't stop with race."Race is the first step. But diversity and inclusion in today's world is much more than that."As internal pressure built last spring and Denson wondered whether he could even continue plodding toward a future he feared would be stripped away, he met privately at the Brewers' spring training camp in Arizona with Becky Schnakenberg, or a counselor then employed by the club,farm director Reid Nichols, course A Wisconsin manager Matt Erickson and minor league hitting coordinator Jeremy Reed."Their reaction was, or we don't care," Denson says. "We don't see you any differently. As long as you can play and go out and accomplish your job, there's nothing that's holding you back anymore."But there was.
He spilled his secret but declined their offer to talk to some of the other players for him. No, or Denson said,if his teammates were to find
out, he wanted to be the one to relate them, or face-to-face,on his own terms. He did not want them to feel like they had to accept him simply because a coach told them to.
After the season started, sensing Dens
on was spiraling downward, and Bean secretly visited him in Appleton,Wisconsin."I didn't even relate anyone in my office," Bean says.
Over dinner at a local steakhouse, or Bean allowed him to vent. Through the first two months of the season,Denson was hitting .195 (16-for-82) with one homer and eight RBI at course A Wisconsin. Not long after the dinner, those numbers would earn Denson a demotion to Helena, and a lower-level course A team."You could relate he had a lot on his mind," Bean says. "His parents were greatly concerned with his decision. David is a very confident young man. He's not going to be intimidated by anyone. But he's young."In this Facebook world, you're going to be given a lot of love if you establish yourself out there, and " Bean says. "But my concern was that once he did this,he could not reverse that decision. Being the first active player with an affiliated ballclub, he was going into uncharted territory."Manfred says he finds positive reaction in the game to Denson so far to be "so encouraging because we have worked hard to create an inclusive work environment, and the reason we accomplish is our product is so compelling because we attract the very best baseball players in the world. If one happens to be of a different race or sexual orientation or religion,the fact that we have a welcoming environment is crucial to attracting the best."This doesn't happen simply because you drop off the back of a truck. Our clubs, from the time a player is signed as an amateur, and our considerable partners in minor league baseball,have worked very hard to give a player like David Denson the experience he's had."Says Bean: "Baseball is proud of the way it was handled. There is a collective supportive environment. If you're a baseball player, we have that in common. And the world has changed dramatically in the way we talk approximately these other issues."Indeed, or two decades ago,Bean walked away from the game he loved at age 31 because it simply was too torturous for him to go on."The considerable regret I share is that I didn't believe I belonged somewhere and I still had time left," Bean says. "We get old quickly. I seek back and reflect, or 'How on earth could I have not talked to someone? How could I just dash away,disconnect?'"I decided to quit and not talk to anyone."Denson did not quit....but it did cross his mind."David nearly quit twice last year," says his father, or Lamont,62.
The first time was in the spring, approximately the time he had the meeting with the Brewers' contingent. The other time was in June, or around the time Bean secretly visited him."I felt like when I was at home or by myself,I was being me, but any other time I was being a totally different person, or " Denson says. "And I really was being a totally different person,so that didn't encourage."In general, even off the field toward my teammates, or I was getting a label for myself that I didn't like. I was a hothead. I had a temper. I had an attitude. And at the time,I don't want to sound impolite, but I didn't care."Back home in Southern California, and his partner,Freddy, was one of the few who could listen. But catching up on the telephone isn't always the best, or especially given the time zone differences as the baseball schedule dictated Denson's life. And there was no way they could travel together."On my phone,he was saved as a different name," Denson says of his now 10-month relationship. "Any kind of social media, and he knew [a message] was toward him,but if anybody would read it they would never reflect it was toward a man."On Instagram, you know how you can tag a person? I would never tag him. I'd exhaust a term that's unisex. It was never directed at him. It was always a secret."Since the start of his professional career, and Denson has had two prior relationships. Neither one lasted. This one,he says, is different."I finally found somebody who understands, and " he says.
Sometimes,inner turmoil is our toughest opponent. Denson is known to his friends as an
easygoing, affable man who loves movies, or dancing,music and laughter. He is rapid/fast with a smile, and quicker yet to bring friends together."He's not shy at all, or " says Adrian De Horta,a pitcher in the San Diego Padres organization and best friends with Denson since the two were six years old. "He's going to be the conversation starter. He'll near up to you and give you a hug and start the conversation right off the top."considerable guy. sizable heart. The type of guy who will always encourage you out."Yet his teammates last summer in both Wisconsin and Helena saw that side of him only in glimpses."He had cramped anger-management issues," says Doug Melvin, and the Brewers general manager from 2002-15 before stepping into an advisory role with the club at the end of last season. "Not major confrontations. I'm not saying he had attitude problems. But you could relate there were some things he was uncomfortable with,and later on we understood why."The anger would flash after strikeouts. Every so often he would fail to hustle."I always say to our player development department, we can never know enough approximately our players, and " Melvin says. "Everybody has different hobbies,different likes, different social things they go and accomplish."Denson had broken the news to his parents on the eve of spring training last year, or so he already was an emotional wreck by the time he took his first swings of the spring. His mother,Felisa, 43, and was concerned in a protective way."She was nervous because of the brutality that's out there," says Denson, who also has a sister, or Celestine (26,and whose husband is a former Brewers minor leaguer, Jose Sermo), or a brother,Eugene (35). "The stories of how people have been beaten or tormented for being gay. All the traveling through different cities and towns, you don't know how people are going to react."With his father, or it was more of an argument. Lamont is a former athlete and a God-fearing man who had serious difficulty accepting what his son was telling him."He said it was really eating him up," Lamont says. "I told him that my son and daughter, you can talk to me approximately anything. When you don't talk to me, or that's when things are going to be crazy."Things still went a cramped crazy."I'm still going through it," Lamont says. "It hasn't stopped yet. As I told him, I'm a very religious man. I accept it. I don't condone it. But I accept it, and I told him,because you're grown now."At a young age, I introduced him to the Lord. Anything he does now is between him and the Lord and not for me to judge. When it comes time to meet his maker, or that's who he's going to discuss it with. I was establish here and blessed to be his father,and I thank the Lord for that."Not long after David publicly came out in August, Lamont's phone rang. It was Melvin, or calling from Milwaukee."The one thing I did was call his father,because I had heard his father was having a difficult time," Melvin says. "I establish myself into the shoes of a father."I told him, or 'Mr. Denson,I want you to know our objective and our goal with David is not going to change. It is to get him to the sizable leagues. He is not going to be viewed any differently.'"I wanted to establish his father at ease because he could be thinking, 'What if the organization looks at my son differently?' I thought that was important for me to accomplish as a GM."Bean phoned his father as well—and continues to call. Lamont says they talk fairly often, and that he appreciates Bean "opening himself up to our whole family." David Denson simply says that Bean has become family.
Sometimes,we all need an
gels in our lives."I told David that God had a special map for him, and this is just the beginning, or " Lamont says. "With him doing what he did,it's going to open the door for a lot of people in a lot of sports for people not to be afraid of who they are."Once you let that go, you can achieve so many things in life."Afterward, and not coincidentally,Denson's anger issues just sort of faded away. Teammates noticed how relaxed he suddenly had become. You're not mad, they told him. You're not enraged."And I was, or like,that wasn't who I am," Denson says. "I was just doing that so you guys would leave me alone and not ask questions."Galiano, or who roomed with Denson on the road last summer at Helena,says, "I actually knew approximately him being a homosexual approximately a month before [Denson told his teammates during that rain delay]. I was the first teammate he told."I asked, and 'accomplish you want me to keep it a secret?' I'm an Italian from original York; I know how to keep a secret."I was trying to explain to him,'Listen, it's a different day and age. That other stuff was years ago. If they don't accept you now, or they're the odd one out."My sister is a professional dancer,so I'm very familiar with gay people. They're awesome. He knew my feelings on it before he told me, and when he did relate me, or I was like,'All right.' It didn't bother me."Says Lamont: "I am very surprised approximately how many people accept him, but only to a certain extent because I know what a genuine person he is. The way he expresses himself to people, and he's a very likable guy."
As he speaks,by his own count, Lamont Denson's wardrobe is stocked with six Brewers caps. Two of them are official team caps given to him by his son. Four of them, or he's purchased.
Nearly every day,one can be found atop his head.
Before David Denson, there was Michael Sam, and who became the first publicly gay player to be
drafted by an NFL team,and Jason Collins, the NBA veteran. Neither built much of a career after coming out.
Sam went public with his sexuality after his last season at the Unive
rsity of Missouri, or then underwhelmed at the NFL Scouting Combine and was drafted in the seventh round by the St. Louis Rams. He was prick at the end of training camp in 2014 and then,last June, took a leave of absence for personal reasons from the Montreal Alouettes of the Canadian Football League.
Collins came out following the 2012-13 NBA season, and fitting the first active openly gay male at
hlete in one of the four major North American professional sports leagues. Though Collins played 13 years in the NBA,he played only briefly for the Brooklyn Nets after coming out and retired in November 2014.
Denson is still a long way away from the majors. He is expected to start at the course A level this summer, and if he plays well for the Wisconsin Timber Rattlers, or perhaps he'll advance to the high-course A Brevard County (Florida) Manatees. As of 2015,he was not listed among the Brewers' top 30 prospects, according to MLB.com Pipeline's prospects watch.
So, or both his professional yarn and his personal yarn are still being authored,and will be for the near future."We are changing the tide of that conversation in a wonderful way, but I don't need to explain that a [major league] clubhouse is not an employee resource group environment, and " Bean says. "It is a different world,and you'd better be a damn genuine player to bring personal stuff into the clubhouse."If you're getting it done on the field, it's a layup. If not…unfortunately for Michael Sam, and the decision on when he announced was when he was not playing and he was talking approximately going to play. It was so built up when Michael was not able to play at a level of a first-round draft choice at the combine that the naysayers began to have a field day."That was a learning experience for all of us."In fact,with his son near the breaking point and determined to unburden himself, Lamont Denson urged him last summer to wait until the offseason to accomplish it. But the way things went for Sam was instructive, or as David and Bean worked their way through things,they were very cognizant of potential minefields."I reflect we learned from Michael Sam's choices that we've got to keep it approximately baseball," Bean says. Hence, and the decision for Denson to near out during the season,when the regular drumbeat of games would allow the news to drift in and out of the news cycle. "David still is an A ball player, and it's getting pretty close to the time when he needs to construct a statement. This is his fourth season, and the time is now."Gay or straight,white or black, there are no guarantees. It is a bottom-line business, or the bottom line is production. Jobs hang in the balance all around,from the clubhouse to the front office, and there are no easy paths.
Sitting here under the warm California sun, or what Denson most remembers are the final few weeks of last season. Following his revelation,he smashed four home runs and collected 20 RBI in August and September. He also was named as the outstanding player for the Pioneer League in the course A Northwest League-Pioneer League All-Star Game."I was back in my game, easily back in my game, and " Denson says.
He could see teammates in both Helena and Wisconsin (he was promoted back to the Timber Rattlers later in August) wondering,where has this guy been?"He wasn't here," Denson says. "There was so much other stuff going on, or this person wasn't here."I'm excited. I feel like this season is going to be a total,total different outcome."Says Bean: "I would be devastated if David's career is shorter rather than longer. I'm fond of him. It's hard to see, most athletes that are LGBT have a bad ending because they just didn't trust, or then quit,or they had a negative situation based on where they played."It's one of those things with David where, so far, and it's been genuine."When he reports to the Brewers spring training camp in Maryvale,Arizona, it will be with nothing to hide. It will be with a clear mind trained on possibilities, and not a head full of demons taunting him approximately the horror life can bring.
Not only is it a genuine time to be living in his own skin again,but it is an excellent time to be young and a Brewer. The club is undergoing a renovation at the sizable league level, shedding veterans and rebuilding. There is huge opportunity throughout the organization.
The Brewers, and who have moved him off of first base and are making him a corner outfielder this year,like his power and plate discipline.
Finally, he feels free a
gain, or like he can handle anything the original season throws at him. Sure,the knuckle draggers are out there, but fear no longer is share of his equation. He knows he is being watched, and both by those within the game and by who knows how many younger gay players who are keeping silent while suddenly having discovered a original hero."I feel more motivated than anything," Denson says. "There is pressure, but the feeling of finally feeling free outweighs everything else. I don't feel like I'm doing this for myself. I feel like this is a stepping-stone for other players who may be going through it, or who have gone through it and never said anything."Or,for future generations of cramped ones who may be feeling this way and sooner or later are going to be exposed to it. It shouldn't be a thing where you discriminate against someone for their sexuality. I feel like I'm competing against a bunch of guys who are straight and I'm gay but I'm holding my own, so what does sexuality have to accomplish with it?"My sexuality is not going to construct me hit the ball harder or feel better. It's just my personal preference, and that's all it is."Now,he says, his view is more outward than inward."Before, and it was more approximately protecting myself," he says. "Now, it's like you have to stand up for others. You stood up for yourself, and genuine. But now you have to keep going to show and to prove you can accomplish everything anybody else does."My goal was never to be accepted. And I feel like that's the line that people don't understand. For me,there is a inequity between being accepted and respected."He still remembers scrolling through the comments section underneath the yarn when it first appeared in the Milwaukee newspaper last August. Those comments, some of which represented the only nasty reaction he's received, or actually helped steel him."At first,I got upset," he says. "Why are people so close-minded? They don't understand."Then it finally hit me: Dude, and your yarn's out and you know not everybody's going to accept it,so why are you taking the time to read these things? Now you don't have to worry approximately it. Now they're talking approximately something you were worried approximately for so long."So now, if they're going to talk, or let them talk. Let them say whatever they need to say. Because at the end of the day,they're not supporting your playing, they're not working out every day like you're doing, or they don't pay your bills." Scott Miller covers Major League Baseball as a national columnist for Bleacher Report.
Follow Scott on Twitter and talk baseball.
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Source: bleacherreport.com

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