Again, we're obviously starting from two very different points. You seeing it as needlessly drawing the attention, I view it as dictating when he would deal with the attention that was going to come one way or another. Let the media expose themselves, just make them do it in the middle of February so that by the time the combine comes around they've run out of stuff to write and can go back to ranking the QB class. From what I saw yesterday while every media outlet was talking about it they all showed the same clip from the same interview where he came out. If that's the only media appearance he's made discussing it I don't view that as being aggressive about it. If he's been doing more then I'm unaware of it, though to be perfectly honest to this point my knowledge of the situation comes from channel surfing for a couple of hours yesterday and seeing some stuff on FB. Please correct me if I am wrong there. Now there's plenty of time for him to start throwing himself in front of cameras to talk gay rights and marching in pride parades. Basically doing anything but getting himself ready for the combine is going to be a mistake. Now's the time for him to be "a quiet young gay boy".
Really the more I think about it the more the timing of it is ing brilliant. The perfect time window both for him and to allow the NFL to preserve and protect its image on all fronts. If he lets the news break during his senior season then he looks like a attention and puts his team mates in an awkward position. Their season wraps up right as the NFL playoffs are starting up and the last thing Goodell wants is anything to distract from the games themselves, or even worse risk the odds on media day for the Superbowl. 1000 reporters, a few hundred players and coaches, some of them your most visible stars - too much opportunity for someone to say the wrong thing and have it on every television set for the next six months. Which brings us to now: just far enough past the Superbowl that most casual fans are ready to be done with football for a while, minus your hardcore draft nuts. Most national media outlets aren't carving out big time blocks for NFL discussion anymore, to say nothing of the fact that there's an Olympics going on. Almost every player and coach is somewhere on vacation so you don't have any where for all the media to descend upon any team's personnel en masse looking for a sound bite. And it's about as far away from the draft and training camp as you can be in the offseason. GMs that might need a pass rusher but know that their players or fans won't stand for it can quietly focus their scouting elsewhere, draw up plans to trade out of whatever range of picks that he might be projected in, and figure out how to make those moves look like the most natural ones in the world. The teams that are really high on him, outraged fans be damned, can pick him up after all the uproar has had a few months to die down. There's a lot of ways that he could this up but I think the first step has been perfectly played.