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HASSLE-FREE en g in eerin g NEW CAR? * 4 1 0 N E 17TH AVE. 5 0 3 .2 3 3 .LUXE Sports writer Grantland Rice once said, “I t’s not whether you win or lose, it’s how you play the game.” I t ’s an age-old adage that serves ball play­ ers well. But what happens when you change the rules o f who plays the game? W hat effect might it have on who wins and loses— espe­ cially if, until recently, most o f the players were gay? The Rose City Softball Association, which begins its regular season the weekend of April 17, has instituted a new rule that al­ lows an unlimited number of straight-iden­ tified players to play on what were, until this year, essentially all-gay teams. It may be a bit too early to ask what long-term effect the decision will have on Portland’s only gay- identified softball league (there are 19 teams in the Open Division League), but it’s not too soon to ask when and why it happened. “During- a February 2009 meeting o f managers— all who are gay— a proposal was made to eliminate the ‘two heterosexual lim­ it’ language from our Open Division Rules of Play,” says Jake Packer, 47, currently in his second term as the RCSA’s commissioner. “[We] discussed the pros and cons related to the proposal, including legal ramifications, moral [and] community responsibilities, and the intent and language o f our by-laws. A t the conclusion, we held a vote and decided it was best for the Open Division to eliminate the rule.” The new ruling hasn’t set well with some of the players, including Tim Bias— aka “Mr. Gay Baseball,” the RCSA’s last com­ missioner and its current public relations ambassador. Bias, 45, wants to reinstate the two-hetero limit so he and his teammates can participate in the nationals, which still limits the number o f straight players on gay teams. The RCSA hosted the 2002 North American Gay Amateur Athletic Associa­ tion Gay Softball World Series in 2002. “Jake just wants to win games,” says Bias, a 15-year member o f the Redwings. “The RCSA is a social place where you get to meet other gay men outside of dark, loud bars. There is no smoking and no drinking. I t’s real gay men right there, all around you. I have made so many great friends playing ball. And many others have found love as well.” Packer assures skeptics that the RCSA is a gay community softball league whose mission is to “provide the best gay softball experience” for everyone, from beginners to the most competitive o f athletes. He also believes it’s “a little misleading” to say the RCSA is allowing an unlimited number of straight guys on their roster o f teams. “It pre­ supposes that there are an unlimited number of straight guys who are clamoring to be on gay softball team rosters,” Packer says. Kevin Burke, 40, plays on one o f the RCSA’s teams, The Bears. He joined the team after moving here from Los Angeles, where he’d played ball, and trying out for Portland’s straight league but never hearing back from them. “In all fairness, I was weighing in at about 320 pounds at the time,” says Burke, admitting that “being heavy puts you on the ‘invisible list’ despite whatever skills you might demonstrate.” Still, the initial rejec­ tion prompted him to forget about the sport until spring 2008, when a Craiglist search turned up a call for players. “I answered the ad and heard back almo&t immediately from [Bears manager] Ryan Brown,” he explains. Brown informed him that the RCSA was a gay and lesbian league, Burke said “it did not m atter” and was soon on the field— and bet­ ter still, dropping the pounds as a result. “Most often, heterosexual players come to us at first ’because I just like ploying boll with you guys.’ but upon discovering the gay softball community embraces them, [they] find the strength to come out os goy themselves." - JAKE PACKER. COMMISSIONER OF THE ROSE CITY SOFTBALL ASSOCIATION The friendly, welcoming spirit o f those early days proved to Burke that the RCSA was where he belonged, gay or straight. “That’s the first thing that the league gives me: a sense o f acceptance and belonging,” he says. “That’s pretty powerful. And a sense of value. I felt valuable to the team both as a player and as a person.” For Packer, the RCSA works as a “gateway mechanism” for some individuals to recon­ cile their sports upbringing and heterosexual pressures with their secret and conflicting desire for members o f the same sex. “M ost often, heterosexual players come to us at first ‘because I just like playing ball with you guys,’ but upon discovering the gay softball community embraces them, [they] find the strength to come out as gay themselves. This has happened more times than I can count,” adds Packer. “They come to realize that it is okay to identify' as gay and be a jock. And no, we don’t hand out any toasters when that happens.” Toasters or not, why change the rules? And why now? Questions such as these prompted Bias to