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There’s this perception that if you’re gay, you must be soft. But rugby is making good progress

IRISH STAR JACK DUNNE IS ‘OUT’ AND PROUD

By Nik Simon

JACK DUNNE is sitting in one of the bars that he used to visit as a teenager, laughing about the days when it hosted underage discos on its sticky dancefloor. He spent his school years tearing up the streets of Dublin, drinking in the Guinness, but there is one particular night that sticks in his memory.

‘I’d lost my friends on a night out and then the beers tell you what you’re doing,’ he says. ‘I was 18 or so and it was the first time I’d kissed a guy. A random guy in a nightclub. It was cool.

‘It felt liberating. I realised I was bisexual when I was 15 but I kept it under the rug for a few years until I’d kind of accepted it myself. That night I was thinking: “Jeez, I wish I’d got this over with three years ago”.

‘At the same time, I was terrified people would find out. Really paranoid. I didn’t want to get caught. You’re scared of what everyone will think, really. As a teenager, you just want to fit in.’

At 6ft 7in and 18st 12lbs, it is not easy to be discreet. Dunne barely fits through the doorways of some of the city’s old-fashioned pubs. Back then, he harboured dreams of making it as a professional rugby player — Leinster being the holy grail — but he was worried about how his team-mates would react. How would a bisexual be received in rugby’s macho, alphamale world?

‘I was the captain of my school’s senior cup team and I didn’t want to risk anything, so I consciously waited for the rugby season to end before I came out,’ he adds.

‘Obviously in rugby you’re showering with all the lads and stuff, so you’re worrying about how they’ll react. I told one friend to start with and it was grand. Then I told everyone else and they were great. It wasn’t a huge thing but it felt like a massive weight off my chest.’

Dunne played for Ireland’s Under-20s, featuring in the same Junior World Cup as the likes of Romain Ntamack and Marcus Smith, before eventually achieving his goal of representing Leinster’s first team. By the time he broke through, his sexuality was old news in the dressing room.

‘When I joined Leinster, everyone already knew,’ he explains. ‘I went to a massive rugby school. I’d always chatted about things with the academy lads and eventually some of the older lads might ask questions about it after a few pints. It was never unspoken. There was no taboo.

‘In teenage rugby locker rooms, it’s probably a more aggressive culture and you could definitely see how younger people would get forced out of the sport. But at this standard, in professional rugby, you can’t be an a ******* .

‘When the Rainbow Cup was launched the other year, Tadhg Furlong was actually pushing for me to be the face of it! He’s a bit of an entrepreneur and was asking for a 30-per-cent cut. He’s a mad man. A funny guy.’

Despite being welcomed with open arms, Dunne is the only active professional in rugby union who has come out. And after gay Blackpool footballer Jake Daniels revealed his sexuality this week, he wants to continue normalising the conversations.

‘I have a lot of respect for Jake doing that because the football world is a few steps behind rugby,’ adds Dunne, 23. ‘Footballers get a lot more abuse, regardless. They’ve got the World Cup in Qatar, which is a bit grim.

‘The sad truth is that money makes the world go around. How can you promote all these rainbow laces campaigns and then consider something like that? Newcastle United Tweeted “Well done” to Jake Daniels but then their Saudi

owners have some

When I told everyone, it felt like a massive weight was now off my chest

questionable beliefs. Can you really do both?

‘I wasn’t impressed when Russia was touted as a potential host for the Rugby World Cup, but our sport is making the right strides. There’s definitely the perception that if you’re gay or bisexual, then you might be soft — but obviously that’s not the case.

‘Rugby has become more welcoming and you’d hope we would get to a point where it’s not a thing for someone to come out publically.

‘Gay people get a hard time in society as a whole and if society improved, then rugby would probably follow a bit.’

Rugby has faced its own battles with homophobia, with former Australian international Israel Folau calling out homosexuality for conflicting with his religious beliefs. Privately, Folau’s beliefs are shared among a number of the Pacific Island community but Dunne has never experienced any problems first-hand.

‘If religion helps you find peace, that’s brilliant but I don’t know if all of it is applicable to our modern society,’ says Dunne.

‘People have their beliefs and I might not agree with all of them, but you have to accept that people are from different cultures. Would I like to sit down with Israel Folau to talk about it? Not really. I don’t agree with posting things like that all over Instagram.’

Dunne is keen to use his platform to open up the conversation. In a few months’ time, he’ll join Exeter, and will become the Premiership’s only ‘out’ player. But for now, his focus rests back on the pitch, where he will do everything he can to help with Leinster’s Champions Cup final against La Rochelle next week.

‘La Rochelle are a quality team, so the lads are really geared up for it,’ he says. And Dunne, for the sport’s greater good, is ready to go into battle with actions and words.

Rugby

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2022-05-22T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-05-22T07:00:00.0000000Z

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