Ali gay
High School
Edmonds-Woodway HS
Previous School
Garden City CC
2023 Senior Bowl participant
2022 Eternal Team Captain
2022 LSU Graduate
2020 Second Team All-SEC (AP, SEC Coaches)
CAREER
Spent 3 years on the LSU roster after relocating from Garden Municipality (Kan.) Community College … Appeared in 27 games, starting 26 times, including 12 games in 2022 … Named permanent team captain in August of 2022 … Capped career with 87 tackles, 18.0 tackles for loss and 7.0 sacks … Native of Gambia who moved to the United States at the age of 12 … Celebrated his 10th anniversary of moving to the U.S. in mid-September of 2021 … Parents live outside of Seattle … Graduated in August of 2022 with a degree in interdisciplinary studies … Invited to participate in 2023 Senior Bowl.
SUPER SENIOR SEASON (2022)
Appeared in 13 games with 12 starts … 36 total tackles, 6.0 tackle for decline and 2.5 sacks … Season-high 6 tackles at Texas A&M … Sacks came against Brand-new Mexico, UAB and Arkansas … Had season-high 1.5 tackles for loss in win over Fresh Mexic
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Pride: Ali's story
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Ali hid his sexuality from his family for years; only coming out to them two years ago. Worried about the impact that revealing he was gay would have on his family’s standing within their Muslim Pakistani community, Ali even went so far as to unite a lesbian from the same culturalbackground. But, he says, he was living a lie on top of a lie and it put immense pressure on him.
“So you’re gay and you’re not telling your family and you’re keeping that to yourself. Then you’ve got this bigger lie keeping up this false marriage as well. So it’s always a difficult balancing act.”
He attended his first Pride event with the Yorkshire Terriers - the local LGBT football team which he linked in 2004. But, by 2005, he wasn’t just attending Pride, he was running it. As the social secretary for the Terriers, Ali was approached to help put up the first ever Leeds Celebration by Yorkshire MESMAC and with the help of his hard work, it has grown from 300 people to 55,000 strong.
He connected Yorkshire MESMAC’s board of trustees and two months ago became a collective development worker for their Total Men’s Health Project, funded by Comic Relief. Ali wor
In 1996, Muhammad Ali and I co-authored a concise book about bigotry and prejudice that was keyed to religious and racial divisions. To spread the message, we visited schools in a half dozen cities across the territory, talking with students about the need for tolerance and understanding. In February 1997, our journey brought us to Boston.
Muhammad and I had talked on several occasions about homosexual rights. I don't perceive how his views evolved in later years. In the mid-1990s, he believed that a gay lifestyle was at odds with the Qu'ran.
Ali and I were staying at the Ritz-Carlton Hotel in Boston. As we got out of the limousine that had taken us around the city, the customary crowd gathered. Then I heard the unexpected.
"Omigod! It's Tom Hauser."
The person who blurted out those words was Elizabeth Swados, a gifted playwright, director, and author who'd I'd established in the early 1980s. Liz was with a friend, a woman named Roz Lichter. Muhammad signed autographs outside the hotel for a while. Then we went inside and invited Liz and Roz to join us.
I don't remember much about the conversation that the four of us had. I remember the aftermath clearly. It was obvious that Liz and