• Please be sure to read the rules and adhere to them. Some banned members have complained that they are not spammers. But they spammed us. Some even tried to redirect our members to other forums. Duh. Be smart. Read the rules and adhere to them and we will all get along just fine. Cheers. :beer: Link to the rules: https://www.forumsforums.com/threads/forum-rules-info.2974/

Coalition of Women's Sports Groups asks NCAA to Reform rules on "gender identity"

Melensdad

Jerk in a Hawaiian Shirt & SNOWCAT Moderator
Staff member
Epoch Times is running the story and says that the coalition is asking incoming President Trump to help the NCAA reform their rules.

Interesting take on the whole thing as recently the courts ruled that SCHOOLS cannot adopt Biden's proposed, and seriously crazed, gender identity rules as part of a reinterpretation of the Title IX policy. The courts pretty much blew that proposal us and did so in fairly spectacular fashion.

But the rules don't affect private sporting organizations like the NCAA.



Coalition of Women’s Sports Groups Urge Trump to Help Reform NCAA Rules

A coalition of women’s sports advocacy groups are asking for help in reforming NCAA rules beyond the scope of a favorable court decision.

8/30/2023
A coalition of female athletes and women’s advocacy groups has asked President-elect Donald Trump for his help in demanding that the NCAA “restore fairness and opportunity to collegiate sports.”
In a letter to Trump dated Jan. 9, the coalition requests that the president-elect use his “powerful voice to urge the NCAA to take action and clarify participation rules to protect the rights and opportunities of female athletes.”
The coalition alleged that the NCAA has “failed” to respond to female athletes “who have been forced to choose between forfeiting games or participating in competitions that are fundamentally unfair and even dangerous.”
The group said it is appealing to the NCAA “in the name of fairness and commonsense.”
The letter was sent on the day the U.S. District Court in the Eastern District of Kentucky struck down the proposed Title IX regulations created by the outgoing Biden Department of Education.
The proposed rules would have added the terms “sexual orientation” and “gender identity” to the existing categories of male and female when defining sex discrimination.
The court decision applies to all educational institutions that receive federal funding.
Adopting the name “Our Bodies, Our Sports (OBOS),” the coalition is demanding that the NCAA establish and enforce the right of female athletes to participate in sports based on biological sex.
The coalition wants the NCAA to repeal all policies and rules that allow male athletes who identify as female to take roster spots on women’s teams and compete in women’s events.

Beyond the Ruling

OBOS is demanding that the NCAA revoke all records set by male athletes competing in female sports and restore the female NCAA sports archives by erasing championship wins by teams with male players and those of individual male competitors.
Single-sex locker rooms for female athletes are also among the OBOS demands, as is restoring the Title IX guarantee of equal opportunity for the sexes—a concept they say was “gutted” by the Biden administration.
Adriana McLamb is a former collegiate women’s volleyball player who is now coaching and serving as a recruiting coordinator in Florida.
McLamb, an activist with the Independent Women’s Forum, told The Epoch Times that the timing of the court ruling was good for her movement and that the election of Trump was “pivotal.”
“The two events mark the beginning of the change back to common sense. A male is a male and a female is a female,” she said.
“Though the fight is not over, we can see the end of men playing in women’s sports and women getting their locker rooms back. Protecting women’s spaces is not anti-trans. It is pro-woman.”
McLamb stated that banning males from women’s sports, revoking the records men set, and stripping championships from trans-identifying individuals or teams with trans-identifying players is about “protecting future female athletes and righting the wrongs of the past.”
Rachel Crandall-Crocker, executive director of TransMichigan, an LGBT advocacy group, told The Epoch Times that the proposed actions would be “absolutely discriminatory.”
Crandall-Crocker said that there will be protests and expressed hope that the court’s decision will be overturned on appeal.
At the close of the letter to Trump, the coalition writes: “We the undersigned represent thousands of female athletes and women’s advocacy groups from across the political spectrum. “We stand together in honor of the generations of women who came before us and in defense of all the women and girls who will come next. “We ask for your help in demanding that the NCAA finally act to restore fairness and opportunity in collegiate sports.”
The 11 signatories to the letter include the Independent Women’s Forum, Young Women for America, and the Women’s Liberation Front.
The NCAA and the office of the president-elect did not provide comment by publication time.
 
Today, President Trump signed an order to prevent men from competing in women's sports. This will definitely put pressure on the NCAA and the U.S.Olympic Committee to change rules.

Also, from the author of the Harry Potter series comes a very passionate video in support of WOMEN in WOMEN'S SPORTS

 
Nor only does the NCAA need to modify their rules, they need to retroactively re-assign medals and trophies to the women who lost place to any males (I won't call them men) who won any of those honors by "cheating."

Yes, cheating. There is no other word that applies;
 
Screenshot 2025-02-05 at 7.54.16 PM.png
 
BOOM...
Protecting women's sports!


FULL STORY at Breitbart News website^^^

Trump Reveals He Has ‘Directed’ Kristi Noem to Protect Women’s Sports, Deny Visas of Transgender Athletes

Elizabeth Weibel5 Feb 2025
Chip Somodevilla_Getty Images (10)
Chip Somodevilla/Getty Imagesnormal
2:06
President Donald Trump revealed that he had directed Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem to “deny any and all visa applications” of transgender athletes attempting to enter the United States.
The announcement from Trump came as he was set to sign an executive order protecting women’s sports from transgender athletes. Before the signing, Trump spoke about the 2028 Summer Olympics and how his administration would “not stand by and watch men beat and batter female athletes.”
“In Los Angeles in 2028, my administration will not stand by and watch men beat and batter female athletes, and we’re just not going to let it happen, and it’s going to end,” Trump added. “And it’s ending right now, and nobody’s going to be able to do a damn thing about it because when I speak, we speak with authority. And, for the same reason — just to make sure, I’m also directing our Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem……to deny any and all visa applications made by men attempting to fraudulently enter the United States while identifying themselves as women athletes, trying [to] get into the games.”
 
NCAA President Charlie Baker commented on President Trump’s executive order:

“The NCAA is an organization made up of 1,100 colleges and universities in all 50 states that collectively enroll more than 530,000 student-athletes... We strongly believe that clear, consistent, and uniform eligibility standards would best serve today’s student-athletes instead of a patchwork of conflicting state laws and court decisions. To that end, President Trump’s order provides a clear, national standard.”
 
NCAA has updated their policy, the NCAA media center is sharing the following:



NCAA announces transgender student-athlete participation policy change​

Men's category open to all eligible student-athletes, women's category restricted to student-athletes assigned female at birth, schools directed to foster welcoming environments on all campuses.
Today, the NCAA announced the Board of Governors voted to update the Association's participation policy for transgender student-athletes following the Trump administration's executive order. The new policy limits competition in women's sports to student-athletes assigned female at birth only. The policy permits student-athletes assigned male at birth to practice with women's teams and receive benefits such as medical care while practicing. This policy is effective immediately and applies to all student-athletes regardless of previous eligibility reviews under the NCAA's prior transgender participation policy.​
"The NCAA is an organization made up of 1,100 colleges and universities in all 50 states that collectively enroll more than 530,000 student-athletes. We strongly believe that clear, consistent, and uniform eligibility standards would best serve today's student-athletes instead of a patchwork of conflicting state laws and court decisions. To that end, President Trump's order provides a clear, national standard," NCAA President Charlie Baker said.​
The Board of Governors also directed staff to help all member schools foster respectful and inclusive collegiate athletic cultures. Following student-athlete leadership direction, the NCAA recently updated its Mental Health Best Practices. The NCAA requires all schools to make mental health services and resources available to all student-athletes consistent with the Mental Health Best Practices.​
"The updated policy combined with these resources follows through on the NCAA's constitutional commitment to deliver intercollegiate athletics competition and to protect, support and enhance the mental and physical health of student-athletes," Baker said. "This national standard brings much needed clarity as we modernize college sports for today's student-athletes." Visit ncaa.org for more on the NCAA's mental health initiatives and resources to support respectful and inclusive collegiate athletic cultures.​
Learn more about the NCAA's mental health initiatives and resources to support respectful and inclusive collegiate athletic cultures.​

NCAA men's sports:
Regardless of sex assigned at birth or gender identity, a student-athlete may participate (practice and competition) in NCAA men's sports, assuming they meet all other NCAA eligibility requirements.​
*Student-athletes taking a banned substance (e.g., testosterone) must complete the medical exception process.​
NCAA women's sports:
A student-athlete assigned male at birth may not compete for an NCAA women's team.​
A student-athlete assigned male at birth may practice on an NCAA women's team and receive all other benefits applicable to student-athletes. Division I leadership is planning to adopt roster limits in place of scholarship limits and new practice squad policies are still in development.​
A student-athlete assigned female at birth who has begun hormone therapy (e.g., testosterone) may not compete on a women's team. If such competition occurs, the team will be subject to NCAA mixed-team legislation, and the team will no longer be eligible for NCAA women's championships.​
A student-athlete assigned female at birth who has begun hormone therapy (e.g., testosterone) may continue practicing with a women's team and receive all other benefits applicable to student-athletes.​
Individual schools have the autonomy to determine athletics participation on their campuses.​
NCAA schools are subject to local, state and federal legislation and such policy supersedes the rules of the NCAA.​
Sports with mixed men's and women's NCAA championships are exempt from this policy (e.g., rifle).​
 
I have to wonder how much the leaders of NCAA sold their souls to the Biden camp? How much did they receive from USAID and other government agencies?
They should be sued.
 
I have to wonder how much the leaders of NCAA sold their souls to the Biden camp? How much did they receive from USAID and other government agencies?
They should be sued.

Just for the fun of it I went to the website for the national governing body for sport fencing. It still allows for Male to Female transitioning/transitioned athletes to compete in Women's events. As fencing seems heavily dependent upon the NCAA I wonder if they will be changing their policy?

Perhaps the various sports have been waiting for an announcement from the NCAA and will modify their policies now that the NCAA has published a revised policy?
 
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