http://www.thecorsaironline.com/sports/la-rebellion-blurring-sexuality-lines-one-tackle-at-a-time-1.1486458

 LA Rebellion: Blurring sexuality lines one tackle at a time

By Daniel Ross

Staff Writer

*Published: *Friday, May 28, 2010

*Updated: *Friday, May 28, 2010

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Dusk is settling over Eagle Rock recreational center, baseball practice is
all but over and the last antagonistic screams of an elementary school
team’s answer to Yogi Berra are finally melting away into the night.

Now it’s time for a real sport, played by some real men.

The players of the Los Angeles Rebellion Rugby Club file onto the floodlit
green. They’re pensive, a little apprehensive even; they’ve got a major
international rugby tournament coming up and the season so far hasn’t gone
quite as well as previous ones – the pressure’s on and the strain is
showing.

But one thing they shouldn’t have to worry about is being on the receiving
end of any flak for fielding a team over half of whom are openly gay – but
if someone does start something, then god help that person.

“The other day, an opposing team player muttered something under his breath
about a new rule being “the new gay rules,’” said Bil Yoelin, Rebellion’s
president and a gay rugger. “So Ananais [Chairaz, a Rebellion player] walked
up to him, took his number and during the course of the match laid him out –
but he did it as part of the game, so it was cool.”

Not to say comments of that ilk are common. During his eight years with the
gay-friendly club, Tabor says that he can remember only three instances of
homophobia while with their league, the Southern California Rugby Football
Union (SCRFU),

“All the other clubs have been really accepting of us,” said Tabor, “it’s a
league that has primarily straight players, we just happen to have quite a
few gay players…but once that whistles blows all prejudices are forgotten.”

LA Rebellion is a relatively new club. Founded around the turn of the
millennium by a former porn actor – no need for the jokes, they’ve already
heard them – it has quickly found its footing. And part of this is due to
the support shown by the local gay community, with bars such as The Eagle in
Silverlake and Vermont in Los Feliz providing them with venues for
fund-raisers.

Nevertheless, as a team still in its nascent stages of life, they have found
it hard gathering momentum to push up through the ranks and are currently
languishing in division three of the SCRFU, despite a couple of good years
previously that saw them move up from division four.

On the back of a season marred by injures, and with the Bingham cup – the
world’s biggest non-pro gay rugby tournament – lurking just around the
corner, they’ve called in reinforcements from the local Pasadena rugby club.

“I’m the interim head-coach,” said Michael Bryant, a physician who,
alongside Hornbeck, has been drafted in from Pasadena. “I’m just here to see
them through the [Bingham] Cup.”

With over 16 years of experience as a player before
becoming a coach, Bryant has seen the way in which the sport has evolved
over the years in its attitude towards people who are gay. He sees Rebellion
as the perfect example of how this evolution has been for the better.

“It’s less unusual than you think,” said Byrant, referring to the amount of
gay rugby players who are active and participating, “There’s a real desire
nowadays to do away with any kind of prejudicial thinking…all you’ve got to
do is look at the number of premier [rugby] players who are coming out of
the closet.”

“I’d say that about 50 percent of our players are gay, 40 percent are
straight and about 10 percent are confused,” said Tabor, singling out the
better looking of the straight players for inclusion in the “confused” box.
Not that there is any division amongst the team by orientation; the players
are united in their love of the game.

“There’s a real fraternity feel in the club,” said Chairaz, a straight
rugger in his third year with the club. “What’s interesting is that it’s the
straight players who seem to get most of the comments from other clubs.”

First and foremost, the LA Rebellion is a rugby club with hopes and dreams
just like any other, and with every loss comes a strong sense of
disappointment, cutting and deep.

However, what they have managed to build in such a short space of time is
something that transcends the typical notion of a sporting team: they have
created a paragon that holds a mirror, albeit mud crusted, up to prejudice
and hate, but in a manner that is neither condescending or confrontational.

“I think what we’ve managed to achieve is extremely important,” said Tabor,
“gay guys are perceived primarily as ice-skaters and gymnasts and so on, but
for us to be able to go toe-to-toe with straight guys in a sport as
physically demanding as rugby, I think it goes one hell of a long way to
dismissing the common prejudices against the gay community.”

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