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He was brought up in [[Surrey]] as a Roman Catholic, and felt isolated as a young gay person with no gay friends or relatives. He became a barrister in 1996,<ref>http://www.5sah.co.uk/barristers/edward-connell/</ref> and has concentrated exclusively on criminal law, as a prosecutor, defender, and more recently a part-time judge.
He was brought up in [[Surrey]] as a Roman Catholic, and felt isolated as a young gay person with no gay friends or relatives. He became a barrister in 1996,<ref>http://www.5sah.co.uk/barristers/edward-connell/</ref> and has concentrated exclusively on criminal law, as a prosecutor, defender, and more recently a part-time judge.


He came out aged 30, and joined the London Titans FC as a player (he had been a keen footballer at school but had not played since). He soon became a coach, and subsequently manager of the team. For the 2012&ndash;2013 season he took the Titans first team into a "straight" league. He has qualified as a Football Association coach and referee, and has been very active in the campaign to rid football of homophobia.
He came out as gay aged 30, and joined the London Titans FC as a player (he had been a keen footballer at school but had not played since). He soon became a coach, and subsequently manager of the team. For the 2012&ndash;2013 season he took the Titans first team into a "straight" league. He has qualified as a Football Association coach and referee, and has been very active in the campaign to rid football of homophobia.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 08:56, 22 May 2013

Ed Connell, 2013

Ed Connell, born 1972, is a lawyer, photographer, manager of London Titans FC, and campaigns officer for the Gay Football Supporters Network.

He was brought up in Surrey as a Roman Catholic, and felt isolated as a young gay person with no gay friends or relatives. He became a barrister in 1996,[1] and has concentrated exclusively on criminal law, as a prosecutor, defender, and more recently a part-time judge.

He came out as gay aged 30, and joined the London Titans FC as a player (he had been a keen footballer at school but had not played since). He soon became a coach, and subsequently manager of the team. For the 2012–2013 season he took the Titans first team into a "straight" league. He has qualified as a Football Association coach and referee, and has been very active in the campaign to rid football of homophobia.

References

Information from a talk by Ed Connell to Croydon Area Gay Society in May 2013.

<references>