The sporting world witnessed an important piece of history on Day 3 of the 2018 Olympic Games when Canadian figure skater Eric Radford became the first openly gay male athlete to win Olympic Winter gold.
This is amazing! I literally feel like I might explode with pride. #Olympics #outandproud https://t.co/zzNd8ggHhE
— Eric Radford (@Rad85E) February 12, 2018
He and his pairs skating partner, Meagan Duhamel, helped Canada earn top honours in the team figure skating event.
Radford officially came out in an article in Outsports Magazine in December 2014, almost a year after helping Canada earn Olympic silver in the same event in Sochi.
The 33-year-old reflected on that time in an exclusive article written for Sportsnet last month.
“I had never felt compelled to talk about my sexuality before because I believed it was a non-issue,” Radford wrote.
“But I put myself in the position of a young kid, who might be afraid to follow their own dream. Or maybe they just want to get out of their own small town and do something in the world,” continued Radford, who skates with Sudbury’s Duhamel. “If that young kid was able to see someone on TV — someone similar to myself, who was openly gay and winning medals — then maybe that would give them the confidence to feel it was truly possible for them.”
Radford shared the podium with American skater Adam Rippon, who became the first openly gay male American athlete to medal in the Winter Olympics.
Congrats to Adam Rippon (@AdaRipp), the first openly gay American athlete to medal at the Winter Olympics! pic.twitter.com/iEOVli9tOB
— Human Rights Campaign (@HRC) February 12, 2018
So proud that @Adaripp and I get to wear these medals and show the world what we can do! #represent #olympics #pyeongchang2018 #pride #outandproud #medalists #TeamNorthAmerica pic.twitter.com/eXMlZ2Utrw
— Eric Radford (@Rad85E) February 12, 2018
Rippon helped the U.S. to team figure skating bronze with a near-flawless performance, and won over the entire Internet in the process thanks to his skill, his story, and his refreshingly honest tweets and interviews.
Bless this Getty photographer for *trying* to capture a whirling Rippon. pic.twitter.com/Dnwvq4AE7P
— Joanna Robinson (@jowrotethis) February 12, 2018
Four years ago, Adam Rippon and MIrai Nagasu were eating in-n-out burger in California, crying and watching the Sochi Olympics from their couch. Look at them now.
— Lindsay Gibbs (@linzsports) February 12, 2018
https://twitter.com/Adaripp/status/946186899793756161
Adam Rippon (@Adaripp) is the first openly gay American male athlete to win a medal at the Winter Olympics after capturing bronze in the figure skating team event
He shares some advice for his 18-year-old self pic.twitter.com/79mlFL3VeX
— CBC Olympics (@CBCOlympics) February 12, 2018
The number one worldwide trend on Twitter: Adam Rippon. #WinterOlympics pic.twitter.com/RwwQsPLnlG
— NBC Olympics (@NBCOlympics) February 12, 2018
Radford and Duhamel will hit the ice again in the short program, which will begin Feb. 13 at 8 p.m. ET.