
When Kelsey Rene first joined Eno River Rugby (ERR) in 2018, they commuted from Greensboro to Durhamโa 45-minute drive, on a good dayโfor practices.
Friends were confused why Rene gave so much time to a sports team so far away. But ERR was different.
โWith Eno River Rugby, for the first time, I just got to be Kelsey Rene,โ Rene says. โThat was a beautiful thing.โ
ERR, the oldest womenโs rugby club in the state, prides itself on being openly queer and inclusive. As a proud Black lesbian, those values are important to Rene.
Rene had long been involved in sports; during their undergraduate years, they played womenโs soccer for Loyola University. But even as they felt accepted, they still bore the weight of being one of the few out queer players, much less one of the few queer people of color on the team.
โWhen I stepped onto that field, I felt othered,โ Rene says. โ[With ERR], you go out there on the field for 80 minutes, and just play, and thatโs all that matters.โ
Thatโs stuck with Rene. Four years later, theyโre now the president of the club, a space they once never imagined holding as a queer person of color. But thatโs what Rene says makes ERR truly unique.
โPeople talk about teams being a family, and Iโve been on every type of team from so young to now,โ Rene says. โIโve never felt the idea of family until I joined Eno River.โ
Searching for space
Sports have long occupied a complicated space for LGBTQ people. In womenโs sports, stereotypes about queerness and masculinity abound. For trans athletes, there is intense scrutiny of their every move as terms such as โfairnessโ and โbiological advantagesโ are levied against them.
Sports can be a hostile place across all ages and leagues; according to the Trevor Project, less than one-third of LGBTQ youth participate in sports, with many saying they donโt participate out of fear. In 2015, the international study Out on the Fields found that 80 percent of gay and straight athletes said they had witnessed some form of homophobia in sports.
LGBTQ folks who do hold a notable space in sports, like University of Pennsylvania diver Lia Thomas or U.S. womenโs soccer captain Megan Rapinoe, are often subject to relentless criticism. Since Thomasโs win for the 500-yard freestyle in the Division I national championship in March, sheโs faced an onslaught of public and media criticism, from personal attacks by right-wing pundits to reactionary anti-trans legislation citing Thomasโs win that seeks to ban trans participants from playing in teams corresponding with their gender.
The nonprofit Freedom for All Americans reports that 64 anti-trans sports bills are currently active across 29 state legislatures, including the North Carolina โSave Womenโs Sports Act,โ which has been stalled in the house since last spring. According to the Human Rights Campaign, 2022 is the โworst year on recordโ for anti-LGBTQ legislation across the country.
As politicians and members of the public try to draw lines in the sand of who sports are for, the importance of LGBTQ-affirming teams and leagues is more important than ever.

Two years ago, Marty Rogersโs friend Garrett Holt asked them to join his new baseball team, the Carolina Crawfish. At first, Rogers demurred.
โI was like, โGarrett, Iโm fat.โโ Rogers says. โHe said, โWho cares? Come play baseball.โ
โThen I was like, โOK, but I donโt run,โ and he was like, โI donโt run either! You run like 10 feet at a time, tops, in baseball.โ
โI said, โFine, Iโll come out and play.โ Iโve been in love with it since.โ
Carolina Crawfish is not your average baseball team. Itโs part of the Dock Ellis League, a self-described โpunk rockโ baseball league named after the late Pittsburgh Pirates pitcher who โfamously pitched a no-hitter on LSD.โ Its model, in other words, goes against the grain, with a spirit of inclusivity, queerness, and communal structure, as upheld by the central rule, โno umpires, no managers.โ
Prior to Carolina Crawfish, Rogersโs primary experience with sports was a โtraumaticโ experience with softball growing up. They had long counted themselves out.
But the Crawfish do things differently.
โWe always like to joke that we โfucking suck,โ but at the same time, we donโt suck, because weโre all just here, having fun and trying to improve,โ Rogers says.
Rogers says their time with the Crawfish has been critical in dismantling their internalized beliefs that sports are solely for able-bodied, athletically elite, and predominantly straight and cisgender athletes.
โโโI think itโs extremely important that we are visible and that weโre loud about how weโre having a good time and taking up space in sports,โ Rogers says. โI think our team is the least white, and the least skinny, and the least male out of any of the teams in the league.โ
Yet the Crawfish have also made Rogers aware of how many traditional sports can be a toxic space even for cisgender males.
โThey will bring their stories of like, โYeah, Iโm a straight dude, but I didnโt fit the mold enough. I was too nerdy, or I was too skinny, or I was too weird,โโ Rogers says. โWe all share this narrative of not being welcomed. So weโre kind of like the Island of Misfit Toys.โ
Affirming spaces for youth
Ailen Marie and Asher Weyhrauch donโt have much in common. Thereโs their hair, for startersโMarieโs is a rich blue in a traditional crew cut, while Weyhrauchโs is a soft cherry red swooping across his faceโand theyโre also several grades apart, attend different schools, and differ widely in personal interests.
Yet when they both came to Raleigh Junior Rollers (RJR), a gender-inclusive roller derby league in Raleigh thatโs expressly queer-affirming, one question let them both know they were in the right place: โWelcome! What are your pronouns?โ
For the two boys and their parents, who had felt uncomfortable on certain teams, in locker rooms, and on fields over the years, that question was like a sigh of relief.
Roller derbyโa roller-skating contact sport with longtime ties to the LGBTQ communityโhas provided a space for Marie and Weyhrauch to express themselves and build confidence in an affirming league. In skating with people from across the Triangle of all gender expressions and backgroundsโand learning to be rough and assertive while also respectful and kindโthe two say theyโve both grown tremendously.
Marie says he loves the theatricality of derby; while on the rink, he and others don a โring name,โ like in wrestling.
โItโs been a really nice means for a lot of people questioning their gender, and not yet comfortable transitioning, just being like, โWell, you can call me this,โโ Marie says. โIt offers up a lot of space to learn about performing as a person, and how thatโs not exactly a linear thing, but itโs definitely something to be optimistic about and search for improvement within.โ
Weyhrauch, whoโs currently in seventh grade, says that while RJR serves a wide age range (ages 8โ17), he thinks itโs most impactful for the younger participants.
โItโs really cool, but I think I see a big difference in the children that play, more than the teenagers,โ Weyhrauch says.
Charity Weyhrauch, Asherโs mom, says RJR has been an important part of Asherโs growth in confidence, especially since โcoming outโ during the pandemic.
โThis was really the first thing, after he came out, where he could see people like him in person,โ Charity Weyhrauch says. โAnd itโs just been amazing to see how happy he was from that.โ
Marie says one of his favorite things about derby is that while it encourages physical development and competition like other sports itโs also based on a foundation of respect and understanding.
โEven though you could frame what weโre doing as violent, by hitting each other, weโre also very respectful of the fact that inside a body is a person, and they have feelings,โ Marie says.
Community beyond college
Rugby was the first space where Ash Davison saw queer people like themself.
โI grew up in Waxhaw, which is a pretty conservative area, and didnโt really understand or know my sexuality at the time,โ Davison says. โWhen I joined my rugby team [at NC State University], I had finally been in a space that was predominantly queer.โ
Yet as Davison graduated, they worried that the queer space theyโd grown used to in college would cease to exist. Then, they found Eno River Rugby.
โWhen I joined Eno, I realized, โTheyโre not just in college, theyโre not just having fun,โ like these identities, theyโre real,โ Davison says. โIt was really cool to see that out in the world, and see these people continue to take up space.โ
At ERR, teammates often repeat the mantra โeverybody is a rugby body.โ That affirmation that rugby belongs to everyoneโand beyond a college time frameโmeans a lot to Davison.
โItโs just that level of comfort and protection in that you know youโre with people like yourself, and no oneโs gonna question it,โ Davison says.
Davison believes that Eno River Rugby is a closer community than most teams, and thinks thatโs largely because of how meaningful it is for queer and diverse groups to have communities like the club.
โOur teammates, theyโre not just our teammates. Theyโre also our friends,โ Davison says. โWe do a really good job of welcoming people and being a friendly queer space for people in the area.โ
While many on queer and gender-affirming teams are grateful for the spaces they provide and the progress thatโs been made, they hope over time to become less of an outlier.
Cas, another member of Carolina Crawfish, says while he loves how โhomemadeโ the team is, he wishes they had more support from the local community.
โWe donโt get much turnout at our games, aside from the family and friends of the actual players, but we really do have a good time,โ Cas says. โA lot of these leagues are often overlooked still, because theyโre not the professional leagues, or theyโre not comprised of people you expect to see playing these sports.โ
Rene, from ERR, says they hope for more visibility in all sportsโnot just smaller, expressly affirming teams.
โI think thereโs value in having a predominantly queer space for people to enter, but that does not mean that sport at a high level should be prohibitive to how you identify,โ Rene says. โYou should be able to play in whatever league that you feel represents you best.โย
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