Switzerland just served up a brand new queer sports hero, and his name is Mika Brunold.
The 21 year old tennis pro has come out as gay in an emotional Instagram post that is quickly bouncing around queer sports fans’ feeds.

Brunold, who has already cracked the ATP top 300 and reached a career high ranking just inside the 290s this summer, used his coming out message to talk about authenticity on and off the court.
He wrote that years of training have taught him success is not just about forehands and fitness, but also about “discovering your personality and staying true to yourself,” which is exactly what this moment is all about.
Mika admits he has been thinking for a long time about how to share this part of himself, saying that hiding and pretending to be someone else was never truly an option for him.
That is why he finally told his followers, teammates and the tennis world “I’m gay,” turning what could have been a whisper into a very proud shout from center court.
In the post he explains that being gay is not only about loving the same gender, but also about dealing with fears most straight people never have to think about, like rejection, silence and feeling different.
He talks about the fear of not being accepted, the pressure to stay quiet and the weight of being the odd one out, before adding the line that hits hardest, “But I’ve grown, and I’m proud of who I am today.”
Mika’s coming out also arrives after a tough sporting moment, as he recently called his failed attempt to qualify for the Swiss Indoors “a bitter defeat,” narrowly missing the biggest win of his career.
Earlier this year he even shared screenshots of homophobic messages he received after a tight Challenger Tour loss, giving fans a rare look at the kind of abuse queer athletes are still dealing with online.
That context makes his decision to come out now feel even braver, because he is choosing visibility and vulnerability in a sport that still has very few openly gay male players.
He is only the second active male tennis pro to come out in the last year, following Brazilian player Joao Lucas Reis da Silva, which tells you just how lonely the men’s locker room can still be for queer guys.
Thankfully Mika is far from alone, and the comments section under his announcement is a rainbow wall of hearts, encouragement and fire emojis, including love from other out athletes and fans around the world.
On his Instagram Stories he admitted he is “overwhelmed” by all the sweet messages and is doing his best to reply to everyone, which is honestly the cutest kind of post match interview energy.
Brunold’s goal on court is to push his ranking into the top 200, but off court he has already smashed a much bigger milestone by showing young queer tennis fans that their dreams and their identity can exist in the same spotlight.
In his own words, he hopes that one day nobody will even need to “come out” at all, yet until that day arrives, voices like his are exactly what keeps the game moving toward a fairer, gayer future.
For now we will happily be courtside watching Mika chase those ranking points, rocking that amazing curly hair and living his truth with every swing of the racket.
📷 IG: @ mika_brunold






