This week the Minnesota Legislature will likely vote on the gay marriage issue and the Vikings made news by cutting their above-average punter. The interesting thing is that these events are not necessarily unrelated.
As you know, former Viking Chris Kluwe became a vocal proponent of allowing same-sex couples to marry, a fact that occasionally became an irritant with his coaches.
The notion that Kluwe's support of basic civil rights was news at all underscores the seismic change underway, and it's a sign of our sports-crazed times that an unusually erudite football punter would signal the tipping point of a social issue.
Last year Kluwe's public appearances on the gay rights issue were periodically punctuated with poor performances, though his overall net punting average was the best of his career. He's also 31 and was set to make a boatload of money, and thus became disposable in favor of younger, cheaper help. That's pro sports. That's life.
Kluwe is gone, so it might be time to ask whether his legacy (if punters can have a legacy) was his ability to drop the ball inside the 20-yard line or to truly engage in a civic issue important to millions of people.
"Both," said Dave Zirin, sports editor of the Nation and author of "Game Over; How Politics Has Turned the Sports World Upside Down."
"On a team that has been horribly managed over the years, he was a constant," said Zirin, a Macalester grad. "The idea that Chris Kluwe is on the slag heap as the Vikings are trying to rebuild is dodgy to say the least. But his legacy as a good citizen is also something on his ledger sheet."
Zirin says the importance of Kluwe's support of gay marriage should not be understated. The punter's initial essay on the topic for Deadspin, which was both funny and profane, puts his expression of his civil rights stand on par with Muhammad Ali's stance on the Vietnam War, Zirin said.