It’s their option. I know he would be extremely honoured, and I know that I am extremely honoured and so is my family.“I guess for Justin this would be a great moment and I think it’s a pivotal moment when we are finally recognising who Justin Fashanu was, not only as the openly gay footballer, but also as a very talented footballer and the first million-pound black player in England.“When I went up to the Football Museum in Manchester a few years ago, I was quite shocked to not see Justin there [in the Hall of Fame]. US biotech firm Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine induced a robust immune response and prevented the coronavirus from replicating in the noses and lungs of monkeys, a study in the New England Journal of Medicine said Tuesday. CTRL + SPACE for auto-complete.Justin Fashanu to be inducted into football Hall of Fame But what’s harder, to live pretending to be someone else or to be yourself?”The reaction of Justin’s family was not as supportive as it could have been when he came out, said Amal, but time – and talking – has helped, with brother John a trustee of The Justin Fashanu Foundation.The Foundation focuses on awareness and education, with key areas of support in mental health, homophobia and racism in football.She added: “My Dad definitely regrets that. Born of a Nigerian father and a mother from Guyana, Fashanu was Britain’s first £1m black footballer and won the BBC’s Goal of the Season award for his memorable volley against Liverpool in February 1980. Justin Fashanu: The first openly gay footballer and why he is now in the Hall of Fame. I don’t blame them because I do know why, but it’s very sad – we’re in 2020 and I don’t understand why there hasn’t been a footballer yet to come out who is still currently playing, because nothing will change.“I think it has got easier because we have moved on in life and in general. Justin Fashanu was an English professional football player who was also the first openly gay footballer. I don’t blame them because I do know why, but it’s very sad – we’re in 2020 and I don’t understand why there hasn’t been a “I think it has got easier because we have moved on in life and in general.“I think today, if a footballer came out it would be definitely not even half as bad as Justin coming out, but I think it would still be hard, it would still be a challenge.“But what’s harder, to live pretending to be someone else or to be yourself?”The former Norwich City and Nottingham Forest striker caused tremors in the football scene in 1990.Decades have past since, and after dying by suicidal in 1998.He is mythologised by many as representing the gulf between the LGBT+ community and professional football.Activists and club managers have jointly worked to stamp out homophobia in the game, Fashanu’s family were not all supportive, however, at the time of his coming out in a