When swimmer Bruce Hayes won a gold medal at the 1984 Olympics in Los
Angeles, there were few, if any, openly gay and lesbian competitors among the
ranks of world-class athletes. While a student at the University of California,
Los Angeles on a swimming scholarship, he won three national titles in freestyle
swimming events and helped win the NCAA championships in 1982. He also won three
gold medals at the 1983 Pan American Games, and set a world record on the men's
4 X 200 meter freestyle relay at the 1984 Olympics.
Hayes first came out to the world in 1990 while competing in Gay Games III in
Vancouver and has since competed and helped organize Gay Games events.
"When you're famous and you come out, all of a sudden, the gay community
wants to embrace you," Hayes said. "You become a role model, and I
felt there was a lot I could do on behalf of the Games. The media would listen
to me because I have the credibility of being an Olympic gold-medal winner, the
kind of leeway to say the Gay Games are serious competition."