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July 14, 2014

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Ian Thorpe comes out as gay

AUSTRALIAN swimming champion Ian Thorpe revealed he was gay in an interview yesterday and said he was now comfortable admitting it after years of denying rumors about his sexuality.

The five-time Olympic gold medalist made the revelation in an interview with British presenter Michael Parkinson aired by Australia’s Channel Ten.

“I have thought about this for a long time ... I am not straight,” Thorpe said.

“This is only something that very recently, in the past two weeks, that I have been comfortable with telling the closest people around me exactly that.”

Thorpe, 31, said he had “wanted to come out” for some time, but didn’t feel as if he could make the admission.

“I was living somewhat of a lie in my life because I was trying to be what I thought was the right athlete by other people’s standards,” he said. “I wanted to make people proud, I wanted to make my family proud, I wanted to make my nation proud of me.

“Part of me didn’t know if Australia wanted its champion to be gay, but I am telling not only Australia but the world that I am and I hope it makes this easier for others now.

“And even if you’ve held in for years, it feels better to lift this and get this out.”

Thorpe also described his years of battling depression in the emotional interview recorded last month.

He said he was on anti-depressants at age 19 and had contemplated suicide, but that he couldn’t deal with the thought of leaving friends and family.

His decision to come out as gay attracted a flurry of supportive comments.

Olympic and world champion swimmer Grant Hackett said he hoped Thorpe’s decision to speak publicly would help him to move forward.

“He’s been through a lot this year with depression and other things and hopefully that can allow him, as a person, to move forward,” Hackett said.

Olympic diver Matthew Mitcham, who revealed he was gay in 2008, said he could “totally understand how difficult this whole process has been for him.”

Australian Marriage Equality national director Rodney Croome praised Thorpe for coming out. “(It) has clearly been a difficult struggle for him and I hope Australians appreciate the trust and confidence he has placed in us all by revealing he is gay.”

The swimmer — known by his nickname “Thorpedo” — retired in 2006 after a glittering career in which he ruled the pool from 1998 to 2004, taking nine Olympic medals and 11 world titles and setting 13 long-course world records.

He returned to racing in 2011 but had a string of disappointing results leading up to his ultimately unsuccessful London Olympic bid the following year.

Since calling it quits for a second time in 2013, Thorpe has endured several health setbacks.

In February he began treatment for depression after a mixture of painkillers and anti-depressants left him disoriented on a Sydney street. He was hospitalized for more than three weeks in April after battling serious infections for shoulder surgery.




 

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