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OLYMPICS: British curler Mouat hopes to prove sport is a safe space

Bruce Mouat, the first openly gay curler to win a World Men's Championship, aims to inspire the LGBT community to embrace sport while chasing gold at the Milano Cortina Winter Olympics. His journey shows that being authentically yourself can lead to both personal and athletic triumphs.

Aadi Nair/Reuters

January 7, 2026

Bruce Mouat aims for Olympic gold while inspiring the LGBTQ+ community to embrace sport and authenticity.

Todd Korol/Reuters

As curler Bruce Mouat prepares to compete for gold at next month’s Milano Cortina Winter Olympics, he hopes that by being his authentic self, he can encourage other members of the LGBT community to take up sports.


The 31-year-old Scot, who became the first openly gay curler to win a World Men’s Curling Championship title in 2023, led the British men’s team to a silver medal at the Beijing Winter Olympics in 2022.


Last year, Team Mouat became the first rink to win four Grand Slams in a single season, making them strong favorites for gold in Cortina. The team also secured their second world title in April, with Mouat crediting his success to his decision to come out to his teammates.


“I’ve been out since I was 18, so quite a long time, but leading into the last Olympics I came out a bit more publicly,” Mouat told Reuters in September.


“I wanted to be open about who I was. I didn’t want to be asked questions in interviews and have to lie. I wanted to be authentically myself, and it really was a freeing moment. I never wanted to hide away.


“From that moment on, I just went with it, and it’s been a great journey. I’ve played better, ultimately, being able to be myself. My teammates are amazingly supportive.”


According to LGBT website Outsports, at least 36 publicly out athletes competed in the 2022 Winter Olympics, including 11 men, with Mouat and French figure skater Guillaume Cizeron winning medals.


The first Winter Games to feature openly gay male athletes was the 2018 Pyeongchang Olympics, where Canadian figure skater Eric Radford became the first openly gay male Winter Olympics champion. Four years earlier, at the Sochi Games in Russia, there were no openly gay male athletes, amid the country’s crackdown on LGBT rights and restrictions on the promotion of “non-traditional sexual relations.”


Sharing His Journey


Mouat, who shared an embrace with his partner Craig Kyle on the ice after winning the world curling title last year, said he wants to show that sports can help people find supportive communities.


“Sharing my journey on social media platforms and showing that I have a loving partner who’s extremely supportive of me, and to be able to go and compete and win world championships, and for him to be there and then to run down onto the ice and for us to embrace,” he said, “just to put that on a different platform is hopefully going to motivate other people in the community. It doesn’t have to be elite sport—they can just get into sports. I just want to prove that it’s a safe space for people.”


Mouat also highlighted how curling has become more inclusive.


“At the last Grand Slam we attended, there was a pride night with drag queens performing after the event, which was amazing to see,” he said. “There were lots of people there to support—both allies and members of the LGBTQ+ community. I love my sport to bits.”


-Reporting by Aadi Nair in Nashik, India; Editing by Peter Rutherford/Reuters

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