Canadian Women’s College Basketball Conference Championship Saturday night Transgender people Score 21 points in the victory and eventually win the Championship MVP.
Cross-athlete Harriette Mackenzie leads Vancouver Island University (VIU) to a 69-59 victory Columbia Christian College (CBC) in the Pacwest Championship. In addition to the athletes’ 21 points ahead of the game, McKenzie also finished the game with 10 rebounds.
Mackenzie won the Conference Championship MVP at the ceremony after the game. It ended a season where athletes punished the game in court, led the entire session by 62 points in second place, and used Canada’s anti-discrimination laws to put the CBC in court.
Click here for more sports reports on FoxNews.com
Mackenzie’s MVP Honors and Conference Championships are the center of trans athletes after a season-long dispute between the two teams. Mackenzie is the 2023 Conference Player of the Year.
Hate leads to Suspension CBC head coach Taylor Clagett and CBC lost the right to host the Pacwest championship because Saturday’s game was supposed to be played in CBC’s own home game. Instead, the game was played at Capilano University due to allegations of sanctions against CBC.
The dispute began on October 25th between the two teams, who won the game 69-56, with McKenzie scoring a 19-point lead. Five days after the Oct. 30 race, the trans athlete posted an Instagram video saying Clagett “had fallen into one of our athletes and had a tirade about me not being allowed to play.”
Mackenzie claims she was also intentionally fouled by CBC players.
“I was thrown on the ground by the 13th-place hand in a game where I couldn’t see the ball, and then I could see head coach Clagett applauding for support,” the trans athlete said.
In response, Clagett posted his own statement on Instagram, claiming Mackenzie’s statement was inaccurate.
“My intentions have nothing to do with a particular athlete, but the safety of female athletes in sports,” Claggett wrote.
Viu then filed a formal complaint to Pacwest, prompting an investigation into VIU. VIU refused to attend the so-called events in the first meeting when the two teams planned to play against each other again in two games on January 10 and 11.
“Intimidation, harassment and discrimination have no place in track and field,” Viu said in a statement to Fox News Digital in January. “VIU fully supports our student-athletes and confirms the right of all athletes to compete in an environment where their safety and well-being are prioritized.”
VIU even asked two forfeitures not to be considered losses in the team’s records granted by PacWest.
“It’s simply unreal and misunderstood to blame CBC, its coaches, players and fans, for being a safety threat,” CBC provided a statement to Fox News Digital, which said the weekend.
The CBC player then condemned Mackenzie in a letter sent to Fox News Digital.
How Transgenderism in Sports Changes the 2024 elections and Fires National Counterculture

Close-up of basketball arrives at basketball. (iStock)
CBC players accused Mackenzie of “personal assaults” against the coach, “slanderous comments” and even “commentary violence.”
“In the past three months, videos and letters posted by members of the VIU women’s basketball team have directly violated multiple rules as described in Section 17.2 of the manual. Various posts include ‘personal attacks, defamatory comments, ‘defamatory comments’, ‘respect for Pacwest, respect for Pacwest’ and result in ‘comments on violence and/or hatred against us’ for our coaches’.
“All all charges raised by VIU players regarding our team and coaches should be communicated directly with Pacwest officials and should not be uploaded publicly to social media.”
PacWest then suspended Krajit in early February, and CBC lost the right to host the Pacwest Championship after the meeting’s investigation.
Click here to get the Fox News app
VIU ended the match with a 21-1 record at the conference and will now compete in the National Championships as the conference champion. CBC will have to settle a wildcard.
Since June 2017, all places in Canada have to comply with it Canadian Human Rights Lawequal opportunity and/or anti-discrimination legislation prohibits discrimination against gender identity or expression of gender identity. The law protects the inclusion of all trans athletes in women’s and women’s sports.
President Donald Trump’s recent executive order in the U.S. “No Men in Women’s Sports” states that any public funding agency that allows trans athletes to participate in girls or women’s sports will lose their federal funding. He also repeatedly suggested that Canada join the United States and become the 51st state.
Follow Fox News Numbers Motion Report on Xand subscribe Fox News Sports Grocery Newsletter.