Former defensive lineman Tony Casillas
said he played next to gay players on the Dallas Cowboys team in the
90s.
The 49-year-old Casillas, who retired
from the NFL in 1997 after more than a decade, played with the
Cowboys from 1991-1993 and 1996-1997.
Casillas made his comments during a
radio interview to discuss the recent coming out of Jason Collins, an
NBA free agent.
“I know that I played with homosexual
players and I knew this when I was playing,” Casillas
said on Dallas' 105.3FM The Fan. “There's a certain amount of
intimacy in the locker room, I'm not talking in a personal way, but
intimacy as far as working hard and being that close together, as far
as accomplishing something on the football field. The problem is
this society. That's why I applaud Jason Collins for coming out.
Being a professional athlete people expect you to have this shield
around you where you can't pretty much show your true nature, if you
will, and you're feelings and I think for him to be able to do that –
[I] think there may be a domino effect with this. … There's a stat
that shows one out of so many guys are homosexual, I had no problem
with that because I knew that. I knew lining up next to the guy.
We all have questions, but to me that didn't matter because the
common goal was how we performed. It didn't matter. Another thing,
it's like if you're black and I'm Hispanic, it's OK to go in the
locker room and make fun of a guy if he's Hispanic but if he's a
homosexual you just don't go there.”
Casillas added that he believes most
athletes don't care about a teammate's sexual orientation.
“I guarantee you, if you did a poll,
anonymous throughout the NFL or any sport I would be surprised if it
didn't favor players not caring [about] the sexuality of their guys
being gay. I would guarantee that. People don't understand that
even though you're this gladiator athlete, even though you're
supposed to be bulletproof guys in that locker room, they don't care
as long as you're doing your job,” Casillas said.