Sure, Doc Rivers
heard whispers about John Amaechi's sexuality when they
were both in Orlando. But here's what the former Magic coach
knew for sure: Amaechi was a good scorer, a decent
rebounder, a little bit of a defensive liability, and
''a fantastic kid.''
''He's better than a good kid; he's a fantastic
kid,'' Rivers said Wednesday night in Boston, where
he's now the coach of the Celtics, after learning
that Amaechi acknowledged he is gay. ''John Amaechi,
when I was coaching him, was a great kid. He did as much
charity work as anybody in our city, and he's still
doing it. That's what I wish we focused on.
''Unfortunately, we're talking about his sexual
orientation, which I couldn't care a flying flip about.''
Rivers was a rookie head coach when he took over
the Magic in the 1999-00 season, a team that won half
its games despite starting four undrafted
players. Amaechi was one of them, and Rivers was chosen as
the NBA's Coach of the Year.
''He was great for me, he was great for the
team,'' Rivers said Wednesday night before Boston's
game against the Miami Heat. ''That was one of the
stronger locker rooms I ever had.''
Although teammates may have suspected Amaechi is
gay, no one treated him any differently because of it,
Rivers said. As for the coach: ''It was none of my business.''
''It was brought up to me, and you look and say,
'So what? Can he rebound? Can he shoot? Can he
defend?' '' Rivers said, before joking about Amaechi's
defensive shortcomings. ''But with everything else, he
was great.''
Amaechi is one of a handful of athletes from one
of the major U.S. team sports to publicly acknowledge
their homosexuality, all of them after their
retirement. Rivers acknowledged that an active player would
probably face harassment from teammates or fans, an
assumption that probably keeps many from coming out.
''It was difficult for people to watch Jackie
Robinson, and they got used to it. They started
watching him and started cheering for him,'' Rivers
said. ''It would be difficult for fans if the guy couldn't
play. That's what's difficult to me; nothing else
should matter.''
But it's inside the locker room that the gay
athlete could face his toughest challenge. Although
players are used to being jeered by fans, the prospect
of being rejected by his teammates is at least as likely to
be the reason that no active player in a men's professional
team sport has come out.
Rivers said that teammates tease each other for
all kinds of reasons, and it's likely sexual
preference would soon become one of them. ''We're all
insensitive at times,'' he said. ''There's no taboo subject
in the locker room. I think if he would have come out,
they would have got on him jokingly. They would have
held no punches, and they would have made fun of him
just like they make fun of guys here.
''But that's the locker room, and that's not
going to change. And I actually think that when guys
do come out, when that day happens, it will make it
easier. I can't wait until it's not an issue.''
The way Miami center Shaquille O'Neal sees it,
the locker room mentality could also work for a gay
player by rallying his teammates to his defense. ''If
he was on my team, I guess I would have to protect him from
the outsiders,'' O'Neal said in Boston on Wednesday night.
''I'm not homophobic or anything.... I'm not the type
who judges people. I wish him well.''
Rivers said that if Amaechi had come to him,
player to coach, ready to go public, he would have
encouraged him to do so. ''I think when you're brave
enough to make that statement, or any statement, and you're
ready to come out about anything, then you should do
it,'' Rivers said. ''You have to understand there will
be a backlash. At least there's going to be a
discussion, but I would tell them to do it. I would tell him
to keep scoring, keep rebounding, and do it.
''I don't know if we'll see that anytime soon.
But it wouldn't bother me at all.'' (Jimmy Golen, AP)