Former college runner Minna Svärd asks her ‘stolen’ champion to return a biomass a few years after returning a biomass in 2019 NCAA II A woman’s 400 meters obstacle.
“It’s time for us to speak up and actually tell people how we feel and experience,” the track and field star said on Fox News Wednesday.
“It’s all unfair. The NCAA allows this to even go on. They absolutely need to be responsible for what is allowed to do for women athletes. It’s unfair.”
Female athletes call on the NCAA to new interconvergence policy: “We demand fair sports”
Swild spoke in the “American Newsroom”, lamenting that the female athlete’s concerns were ignored “make others feel better.”
Cecé Telfer ranked first in the women’s championship and 390 in the men’s competition.
Telfer has been working hard to continue competing in track and field competitions and hopes to be the Olympics despite being banned from the women’s world rankings competitions by world track and field.
Telver said last month that in the president Donald Trumpelection.
Telfer told CNN Sports: “I need some explanation on why you want to completely eliminate our society when we do anything wrong.”
Svärd responded Wednesday, believing that “no one” was trying to “eliminate” trans athletes, while she and other women demanded “fairness.”
NCAA Responds to Critics Calling for Potential Breakouts in Its New Anti-Movement Policy

2019 NCAA Class II Women’s 400-meter obstacle. Cecé Telfer stands in the center. (Minna Svard/America’s Newsroom)
Svärd wrote about her Wall Street Journal Column Published on Monday, she reflects on the unfairly received titles from biological women by male-born competitors and praised Trump’s February 5 executive order titled “Letting men out of women’s sports” to establish “a clear policy to protect women’s track and field integrity.”
But for women like Sved, it was too late to say the executive order. The former East Texas A&M athlete called for corrections in her column, saying she said she had deprived the female athlete of the title.
this NCAA’s new policy For athletes’ “assigned males” pointing out that biological males may not compete on women’s teams, but they “may practice teams that are consistent with gender identity and receive all other benefits applicable to student-athletes who otherwise qualify for practice”.
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A spokesperson for the agency told Fox News Numbers Last month, the governing body will not allow biomale athletes to participate in the female category based on a changed birth certificate.
“This policy clearly shows that there is no immunity and athletes who designate males at birth may not compete on a team of women with revised birth certificates or other forms of identity cards,” the spokesperson said.
Regarding trans athletes who practice trans athletes in women’s teams, an NCAA spokesperson said:
“For decades, male practice players have been a staple in college sports, especially in women’s basketball, and the association will continue to consider this in policy.”
Fox News’s Ryan Gaydos contributed to the report.