Caitlyn Jenner Drops a Nuke on the Unfairness of Biological Males in Women's Sports

(Photo by Evan Agostini/Invision/AP, file)

Lia Thomas, the transgender swimmer, was awarded first place at the 2022 NCAA Division 1 Women’s Swimming & Diving Championships in the 500 freestyle on Thursday.

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But it didn’t go down well with some of the other competitors and others in the audience. You can see here how there’s wild cheering for Emma Weyant, the freshman who was awarded second place. But just polite claps from the other competitors for Thomas. One girl doesn’t even clap.

Here’s Thomas talking about competing there.

You can see the size difference here:

Parents weighed in on the situation.

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It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to see that it isn’t fair to the women and good on the editor at Swimming World  John Lohn for calling out the unfairness when so many others would just be silent on the damaging effect this is having on women’s sports.

When Thomas touched the wall in 4:33.82 during the prelims of the event, that time did more than earn her the top seed for the final. Her presence kept ninth-place finisher Tylor Mathieu from Florida out of the championship final. Her presence – and the NCAA’s inaction – kept 17th-place finisher Reka Gyorgy of Virginia Tech out of the consolation final. Mathieu and Gyorgy deserved their proper moments in the spotlight. Both were denied.

Years down the road, Lia Thomas’ name will be listed as the titlist of the 500 freestyle at the 2022 NCAA Championships. There should be an asterisk next to her name. Meanwhile, the NCAA will be remembered for turning its back on biological women and producing a competitive environment that was anything but legitimate.

Lohn noted male puberty and testosterone as well as “A 6-3 frame. Greater natural strength. Larger hands and feet. Enhanced lung capacity. None of these edges, for the record, can be fully mitigated…A transgender female competing against biological females is not a fair fight.”

Lohn said that when Swimming World proposed alternative competition options for Thomas, they were attacked as transphobes.

Martina Navratilova, who was a tennis legend for women’s sports, also spoke out against the unfairness of it all, suggesting that perhaps there should be an asterisk on the “win.” She also proposed that the answer to the question would be to allow biological women to compete against biological women and then have an open category. She’s also been attacked for speaking up for fundamental fairness for women.

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But Caitlyn Jenner, who is also transgender, delivered the response of all responses on the subject. Jenner had weighed in saying, “I don’t see how you can be happy beating other girls under these circumstances. You have to have a sense of personal responsibility.” Then Jenner was attacked by Pink News who called the remarks a “disgraceful attack” on transgender people. Then Jenner leveled them.

“No, I just had the balls to stand up for women and girls in sports,” Jenner said.

Unfortunately, the NCAA and much of the media don’t.

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