Clay Travis reacts to transgender swimmer shattering records at University of Pennsylvania
Outkick founder Clay Travis joined ‘Fox & Friends,’ arguing the issue ‘threatens to destroy all of women’s sports.’
Parents who were outraged at the NCAA for allowing University of Pennsylvania transgender swimmer Lia Thomas to compete and dominate in women’s competitions wrote a letter to the college athletics’ governing body demanding a rule change.
Thomas, a transgender student at the Ivy League university, dominated the 500-yard freestyle preliminaries and finals at the Zippy Invitational at the University of Akron this month. Thomas earned a winning time of 4:34.06 in the finals, breaking the national record, and set new school records in the 1,650-yard freestyle and 200-yard freestyle competitions. Thomas previously competed as a man for three years on the school’s men’s team. Thomas’ success on the women’s team has renewed criticism over allowing transgender women to compete against biological females.
Lia Thomas’ participation on women’s swim team prompted a letter from parents of teammates.
(Penn Athletics)
NCAA president Mark Emmert didn’t immediately respond to the letter.
(AP Photo/Matt York, File)
NCAA rules state that a trans woman can’t compete with women until after undergoing testosterone suppression treatment for a year. Thomas recently brushed off her critics in an interview, saying the NCAA rules are fair and “promote competition integrity.”
The NCAA has defended its policy, which requires testosterone suppression treatment, as part of its vision for “fair competition.”
“The NCAA Board of Governors firmly and unequivocally supports the opportunity for transgender student-athletes to compete in college sports,” the NCAA said in April. “This commitment is grounded in our values of inclusion and fair competition.”
The NCAA has defended its policies regarding trans athletes.
(AP Photo/Michael Conroy, File)
“The NCAA has a long-standing policy that provides a more inclusive path for transgender participation in college sports. Our approach – which requires testosterone suppression treatment for transgender women to compete in women’s sports – embraces the evolving science on this issue and is anchored in participation policies of both the International Olympic Committee and the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee. Inclusion and fairness can coexist for all student-athletes, including transgender athletes, at all levels of sport.”
Fox News’ Jessica Chasmar contributed to this report.
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