First Openly Gay Skater to Win The Olympics Gold, 'Eric Redford'






 Canadian figure skater Eric Radford has said he "might explode with pride", after becoming the first openly gay male Winter Olympics champion. 
Radford took gold at the Pyeongchang Games in the team figure skating event, alongside his partner Meagan Duhamel.
The pair performed a beautiful routine set to Adele's Hometown Glory.
US skater Adam Rippon, the first openly gay athlete to reach the US Winter Olympics team, won bronze in the same event at the Gangneung Ice Arena.
He skated to Coldplay's O, and Arrival of the Birds by Cinematic Orchestra.
The team figure skating, which debuted four years ago, sees each nation compete in the men's, women's, pairs', and ice dance disciplines. The team with most points overall takes the gold medal.
They join openly bisexual Dutch speed skater Ireen Wust - her nation's most successful Olympian with 10 medals, including golds from four consecutive Games.
The Canadian skating team pose with their gold medalsAfter his win, Radford, 33, wrote on Twitter: "This is amazing! I literally feel like I might explode with pride."


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 Gold medalists (L-R) Patrick Chan, Gabrielle Daleman, Kaetlyn Osmond, 
Meagan Duhamel, Eric Radford, Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir of Team Canada
Later, he tweeted a smiling picture with Rippon, adding the hashtag "#outandproud".
Fellow Canadian medallist and LGBT advocate Mark Tewksbury, who won a swimming gold in 1992, sent his congratulations. 
"FINALLY in 2018 an openly gay man is on top of the podium," he said. "No more isolation for LGBT sport men!!"
"It's fantastic," said Angela Ruggiero, the head of the International Olympics Committee's Athletes Commission. "[He's] paving the way to send a really positive message globally to say that everyone should be accepted and that everyone should be able to compete at the Olympic Games." 
Decades before Radford and Rippon, gay British skater John Curry won a figure skating gold at the 1976 Winter Olympics in Innsbruck. He had not made his sexuality public, but was outed by a German newspaper shortly afterwards. 
During the 2010 Olympics, Dutch Wust was not happy when her sexuality became an Olympic story. She said in an interview at the time that no one would ask her athletic male counterpart, Dutch medallist Sven Kramer about his relationship, "so why would you ask me"? 
Some on Twitter questioned why it made a difference if Radford was gay or straight. 
"Why does his sexuality matter? He is an athlete that won a medal," one observer wrote.
Another replied: "It matters to people legitimately afraid of losing jobs or getting abused if they are open about being gay. When someone can reach the top of their field without hiding, that gives hope."  

Absolutely incredible to see two proud gay men excelling at what they do best. Keep it up boys! You are amazing role models for our community. ❤️🏳️‍🌈🇨🇦🇺🇸@Rad85E @Adaripp https://twitter.com/rad85e/status/963024289300602881 

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