Having earned a spot Sunday on the U.S. Ski Team, is the second openly gay man who will compete for the United States at the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
Kenworthy, 26, placed second at the final Olympic qualifier for freeski slopestyle, .
Twenty-eight-year-old figure skater , the first openly gay man to qualify for the Winter Olympics, was selected for the figure skating team on Jan. 7.
Before this year, the U.S. had never sent an openly gay man to compete in the Winter Games. The last time an out male athlete competed on Team USA in the Summer Olympics was ago in Athens, Greece.
As NPR earlier this month:
Another gay athlete, luger , was also vying for a spot on Team USA this year, but a sled malfunction slashed his chance at qualifying in December.
Figure skater Johnny Weir faced speculation about his sexuality while competing in 2006 and 2010, but he avoided questions on the matter. In 2011, he publicly confirmed he was gay in his memoir, Welcome to My World.
My run from today that secured my spot to PeyeongChang as the top ranked US slopestyle skier!!!
— Gus Kenworthy (@guskenworthy)
Kenworthy publicly in 2015, a year and a half after he took silver in slopestyle at the 2014 Sochi Olympics.
that competing as an openly gay athlete had boosted his confidence on the way to Pyeongchang.
"I am more open with everyone in my life, and I think it just translates into me being able to ski a little bit more freely and not have so much to focus on and worry about," Kenworthy said.
Rippon made headlines earlier this month for the selection of Vice President Pence to lead the U.S. delegation to Pyeongchang, citing Pence's alleged support of gay conversion therapy. (Pence's spokesperson called "this accusation ... totally false.")
nothing has made me feel more PRIDE than getting to wave a rainbow flag in a national TV commercial!
— Gus Kenworthy (@guskenworthy)
Both Rippon and Kenworthy have indicated they from President Trump to visit the White House with Team USA after the Winter Games.
Over the past two years, Kenworthy has become a vocal advocate of LGBTQ visibility in sports — and is widely known as "the gay skier."
He was recently named and appears in a new commercial, sporting a Team USA uniform and a rainbow flag.
"The Olympics is a cool opportunity to represent our country, which is amazing," Kenworthy told Reuters. "But I have another community I am competing for, and that is the LGBT community."
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