Storm Starts Own Gay Outreach
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SEATTLE â Jacqueline Jordan wrapped her arms around her partner, Mauraan Schultz, as they listened to Seattle Storm coach Lin Dunn.
âI want gay and lesbian people at our games!â Dunn hollered to a large group of lesbians at a bar at Key Arena. âBring two friends next time you come. Bring all your former lovers.â
The Storm, like several other teams in the WNBA, are reaching out to the lesbian community--advertising in alternative publications and planning postgame events for the cityâs lesbians.
With WNBA statistics showing that 75 percent of game audiences are women, targeting lesbian organizations for group ticket sales is a natural move.
As a second-year franchise that lost a league-worst 26 games last season, Storm attendance is sparse, averaging a WNBA-low 5,445 fans. The team has improved, already surpassing last yearâs six wins. But now itâs competing for fans with the Seattle Mariners, who are having a record season.
âThe lesbian market has shown a lot of support to not only the Storm but in other WNBA cities,â said Storm vice president of operations Karen Bryant. âWeâre trying to be as broad-based and inclusive as we can get so people will come out and sample our product.â
In May, the Sparks made a promotional appearance with Girl Bar, a 12,000-member lesbian club and Sparks sponsor. The Miami Sol also have held public appearances for lesbians.
The Sacramento Monarchs planned a gay pride night for Saturday--the first time the team has dedicated a night to the gay community. A pregame concert was part of the deal, along with a gay pride T-shirt.
âJust like weâre reaching out to the swim community and the military community, weâre reaching out to the gay and lesbian community,â said Monarchs spokeswoman Sonja Brown. âWhatever we can do to add value to the experience of that particular group.â
The Minnesota Lynx and Phoenix Mercury are advertising in gay and lesbian magazines.
In New York, however, the Liberty donât feel the need to target the lesbian community. They already have one of the leagueâs biggest fan bases with more than 15,000 people per game.
âWe donât look at it as needing to target specific groups because the response to what weâve said to the world and New York has been fantastic,â Liberty spokeswoman Mary Pat Clarke said.
Though lesbians may be included in marketing in some more conservative cities, those teams arenât using the L-word.
âWe do broad-based advertising,â said Utah Starzz spokesman David Allred. âWe kind of follow the demographic the WNBA says is our market: families, kids and women. And I think thatâs whoâs in the stands.â
The league says marketing is mostly up to the individual teams, but it stresses that everybody should be targeted.
âWeâve tried very hard to be an inclusive league,â said WNBA president Val Ackerman. âThatâs the beauty of basketball and the WNBA. Weâre really proud of the diversity of our fans, our players and our staff, but what unifies everybody is what goes on out there (on the court). The game is what brings it all together.â
While Seattleâs lesbian community seems to appreciate the Stormâs efforts to make them feel welcome -- and ultimately take their money -- some believe the team should do a lot more, such as passing out handouts every night to show fans it supports womenâs organizations and activities.
Schultz works for an 80-member social organization called Seattle Womenâs Network, which aims to draw lesbian couples âout of their nest and get active.â Going to Storm games is one way to do that, she said.
Yet she and Jordan say the Storm didnât advertise well enough for the recent postgame event they attended at a Key Arena bar. There were no signs or announcement at the game. Players didnât show up, and some said they didnât even know about it.
âI wish they were walking the talk and not just going halfway and dropping the ball,â Jordan said.
âThe word âlesbianâ is taboo,â said Schultz, wearing a green Storm cap. âYouâve got 5,000 parents out there with kids and they donât want to hear about lesbians. Even if theyâre tolerant, they donât want it shoved in their face.â
The same night Schultz and Jordan partied after the game, a gay and lesbian bar in Seattleâs Capitol Hill neighborhood offered a 75-cent discount on drinks for Storm fans and held a raffle for T-shirts, tickets and other prizes.
âWe just want basketball fans in the building,â said Valerie OâNeil, Storm director of public relations.
Seattle rookie Semeka Randall said she agrees with the organizationâs efforts, but believes the Storm shouldnât just focus on women in the lesbian community.
âWe want families and kids, little boys and little girls saying âShe got game, she can play,ââ she said.
Arlis Stewart, a volunteer at Seattleâs Lesbian Resource Center, believes itâs important the lesbian community shows support for female athletes in Seattle, whether at the professional or college level.
âWith any community and any sports team, people have all kinds of different reasons for going and wanting to go,â Stewart said. âSome just love basketball, some were basketball players in college or high school and for others itâs a point of supporting women in sports. Itâs a really mixed bunch of motivations, but it all amounts to this community saying to the Storm, âWeâre delighted youâre here.â â