Skip to content

MuggleNet

  • Site
    • Contact Us & FAQ
    • History
    • Meet the Team
    • MuggleNet Live!
    • Press
    • Publications
    • Special Projects
    • Volunteer with Us!
    • Year in Review
  • Podcasts
    • Alohomora!
    • Full Circle
    • LITHAPPENS
    • Potterversity
    • Promptly Potter
    • SpeakBeasty
  • Harry Potter
    • Book Quotes
    • Book Series
    • Coloring Books
    • Film Companions
    • Film Series
    • Hogwarts Library
    • Little Things
    • Music
    • Video Games
  • Fantastic Beasts
    • Book
    • Coloring Books
    • Film Companions
    • Fantastic Beasts Film Quotes
    • Film Series
    • Little Things
    • Music
    • Video Games
  • The Quibbler
    • Owl Post
    • Bathilda’s Notebook
    • The Department of MYTHteries
    • The Dirigible Plum
    • Into the Floo
    • Muggle Studies
    • The Pensieve Papers
    • The Three Broomsticks
    • April Fools’
    • The Quibbler Vault
  • The Daily Prophet
    • Book Trolley
    • Editorials
    • Event Reports
    • Exclusive Interviews
    • Features
    • Giveaways
    • Listicles
    • Merchandise Reviews
    • Movie Reviews
    • Television Reviews
    • Theater Reviews
    • Wizolympics
  • Muggle World
    • Charity
    • Exhibitions
    • J.K. Rowling
    • MinaLima
    • Quadball
    • Studio Tours
    • Theatrical Play
    • Theme Parks
    • Wizarding World Digital
  • Fans & Fun
    • Crazy Caption Contest
    • Fan Focus
    • Fandom
    • Fandom Sortings
    • Fandom Timeline
    • Fun Lists
    • Games and Trivia
    • GNOMEs
    • Potter DIY
    • Potter Weddings
    • #PotterItForward
    • Rosmerta’s Recipes
    • Song Parodies
    • Wizard Rock
    • Wizarding Wordle
  • Site
    • Contact Us & FAQ
    • History
    • Meet the Team
    • MuggleNet Live!
    • Press
    • Publications
    • Special Projects
    • Volunteer with Us!
    • Year in Review
  • Podcasts
    • Alohomora!
    • Full Circle
    • LITHAPPENS
    • Potterversity
    • Promptly Potter
    • SpeakBeasty
  • Harry Potter
    • Book Quotes
    • Book Series
    • Coloring Books
    • Film Companions
    • Film Series
    • Hogwarts Library
    • Little Things
    • Music
    • Video Games
  • Fantastic Beasts
    • Book
    • Coloring Books
    • Film Companions
    • Fantastic Beasts Film Quotes
    • Film Series
    • Little Things
    • Music
    • Video Games
  • The Quibbler
    • Owl Post
    • Bathilda’s Notebook
    • The Department of MYTHteries
    • The Dirigible Plum
    • Into the Floo
    • Muggle Studies
    • The Pensieve Papers
    • The Three Broomsticks
    • April Fools’
    • The Quibbler Vault
  • The Daily Prophet
    • Book Trolley
    • Editorials
    • Event Reports
    • Exclusive Interviews
    • Features
    • Giveaways
    • Listicles
    • Merchandise Reviews
    • Movie Reviews
    • Television Reviews
    • Theater Reviews
    • Wizolympics
  • Muggle World
    • Charity
    • Exhibitions
    • J.K. Rowling
    • MinaLima
    • Quadball
    • Studio Tours
    • Theatrical Play
    • Theme Parks
    • Wizarding World Digital
  • Fans & Fun
    • Crazy Caption Contest
    • Fan Focus
    • Fandom
    • Fandom Sortings
    • Fandom Timeline
    • Fun Lists
    • Games and Trivia
    • GNOMEs
    • Potter DIY
    • Potter Weddings
    • #PotterItForward
    • Rosmerta’s Recipes
    • Song Parodies
    • Wizard Rock
    • Wizarding Wordle
  • News / Quadball

Quidditch Attracting More LGBTQ+ Players

by Aly Kirk · January 16, 2020

Quidditch, the famed wizarding sport played on broomsticks, has progressively become more popular in the Muggle world since 2005, having blossomed into an internationally recognized team sport. In the Muggle world, quidditch is still played on broomsticks of sorts and utilizes all the required equipment – hoops and all. The Golden Snitch is also included, but not in the way you’d think. The Snitch Runner is, in fact, a person wearing a bright-yellow or gold T-shirt. In order to catch the Snitch, a player has to grab a tennis ball that swings in a sock from the Runner’s waist. It’s as non-magical as Muggle quidditch can get, but it does the trick!

The idea of a wizarding game from a children’s fantasy book series becoming an internationally legitimate sport was itself at one point a fantasy. But now that quidditch has taken off and is flying high, it’s become a way for players to express themselves and their love for the wizarding world without judgment.

In recent years, the sport has attracted more LGBTQ+ players to the field thanks to inclusion initiatives.

Emma Humphrey, a player from New Zealand who plays competitively in London, said the fact that the sport is “mixed-gender” is what makes the game fun and inclusive.

When I say ‘mixed[-]gender sport’, I mean male, female and everyone in between. So you’ve got trans … agender, and people in transition as well. We do attract a lot of people from the LGBT+ community… Because generally, when you look at most segregated sports, they’re not given a platform to get some serious competition.

The International Quidditch Association (IQA) has voiced its support of members from the LGBTQ+ community joining quidditch teams.

Quidditch is an inclusive sport that does not accept any kind of discrimination. All Quidditch athletes have the right to define how they identify, and it is this stated gender that is recognized on [the] pitch.

 

 

Many teams around the world have made an effort to be more inclusive. US Quidditch (USQ) calls the game “a mixed-gender, contact sport played by over 450 teams around the world.” The quote is featured on the front page of the USQ website. Official rules of the USQ have been changed to include nonbinary persons in its gender maximum rule. The gender maximum rule dictates that no team can have four players of the same gender identity in play.

USQ accepts those who don’t identify within the gender binary system and acknowledges that not all of our players identify as male or female.

The change came as an inclusion effort thanks to what the USQ calls Title 9 3/4.

In the Harry Potter series, quidditch teams are not separated by gender, and neither are the teams in US Quidditch. Title 9 ¾ is an advocacy and awareness branch of USQ that ensures the policies implemented by USQ promote gender equality and inclusivity. Title 9 ¾ gets its name from both the fictional platform to get to the Hogwarts Express and the US law that seeks to prevent gender discrimination in sports, Title IX.

We applaud the efforts of US Quidditch and the International Quidditch Association for taking the dive to make the pitch a more welcoming atmosphere.

Social:

  • Next story Insight Editions Releases New Volumes in “Harry Potter: Film Vault” Series
  • Previous story UPDATED: “Guns Akimbo” Drops Official Trailer and Release Date

MuggleNet Archive

Important Dates

June 2025

Sun, Jun 15

Kat Miller's birthday
Recurs yearly

Creative & Marketing Director

Tue, Jun 17

Umbridge sacks Hagrid; McGonagall is stunned and sent to St. Mungo's
Recurs yearly

1996

Wed, Jun 18

Battle of the Department of Mysteries
Recurs yearly

1996

Sirius is murdered by Bellatrix
Recurs yearly

1996

WWoHP Hogsmeade at Universal Orlando's anniversary
Recurs yearly

2010

Thu, Jun 19

Dumbledore tells Harry about the lost prophecy
Recurs yearly

1996

Sat, Jun 21

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix book
Recurs yearly

2003

Wizarding world knows Voldemort is back
Recurs yearly

1996

MuggleNet podcasts are sponsored in part by Secretlab.

Thanks to its research-backed ergonomic design, including a proprietary 4-way adaptive lumbar support system, the Secretlab TITAN Evo Harry Potter Edition will comfortably support you even when you’re up to no good.

Did You Know

During filming for “Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince”, Rupert Grint caught swine flu.

Potter History

November 16, 2001 – The first Harry Potter film is released in the United States, opening on a record 3,762 screens in the United States alone. On opening weekend, it grosses $90 million in the United States and £16 million in the United Kingdom, setting records in both countries.

Potter Quote

“And what in the name of Merlin’s most baggy Y-fronts was that about?”

MuggleNet is an unofficial Harry Potter fansite.
Please email us if you have any questions or concerns.
© 1999–2025 MuggleNet.com. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | COPPA Policy | Terms of Use | Feedback


MuggleNet is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program and Bookshop.org's affiliate program, affiliate advertising programs designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com and bookshop.org.