Girl with suspected autism punished by UK 'Serious Case Panel' for asking trans soccer opponent with beard, 'Are you a man?'



A girl with suspected autism was punished by a so-called National Serious Case Panel in the United Kingdom for asking a bearded transgender soccer opponent, "Are you a man?" the Telegraph reported.

The 17-year-old cried when the panel found her guilty of “discrimination” for her remarks during a match against a trans-inclusive team, the Telegraph added.

'The FA has declared open season on women and girls in football with its disastrous policy, which means that no one can question a male player participating in a women’s game.'

The outlet — citing a previous report in Telegraph Sport — said it was the "latest case to cause outrage over the Football Association’s policy of allowing those born male to play in the women’s game."

The girl's county Football Association charged her with saying, “Are you a man?” as well as, “That’s a man," and “Don’t come here again,” or similar comments, the Telegraph said.

She was banned for six matches, four of which were suspended, after a three-hour hearing last week during which she denied expressing transphobia at the "friendly" game in July, the outlet noted.

The girl also wept during a 30-minute grilling conducted via video conference, the Telegraph said, adding that she had been facing a ban of up to 12 games.

An individual on the call said the hearing was “farcical” and added that panel members repeatedly “misgendered” the alleged victim as “he," the outlet reported, adding that the girl also was said to have been repeatedly asked, “How many LGBQT+ players do you have in your team?”

More from the Telegraph:

Her parents were outraged both by the hearing and the outcome, with her mother telling Telegraph Sport: “We’ve always taught our daughter to ask questions, and if she doesn’t feel comfortable or she doesn’t feel safe then she should go to somebody in charge and ask the question. In safeguarding training at places of work, you’re always told that you should question everything but she’s been told and effectively sanctioned by the FA for doing so. She asked, ‘Are you a man?’, and she admitted to that. The FA is essentially saying that no woman, when faced with what appears to be a male on the pitch, is entitled to ask a question.”

The girl’s plight had previously been cited by former FA chairman Lord Triesman, who wrote to the governing body’s current chair and chief executive last month to complain about its trans policy. The FA has continued to permit players born male to compete in female-only events, despite being urged in May by then-Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer to adopt the “unambiguous position” of a ban.

The outlet noted that Fiona McAnena — director of campaigns at Sex Matters — told Telegraph Sport: “The FA has declared open season on women and girls in football with its disastrous policy, which means that no one can question a male player participating in a women’s game. Anyone who does could find themselves suspended just for asking. Disciplining women and girls for saying what they see plainly in front of them makes a mockery of the game. The FA’s new strategy for women’s and girls’ football is worthless as long as this transgender inclusion policy is in place. How can the FA talk about a commitment to true equality in community football while undermining the rights and safety of the very players it claims to be supporting?”

The girl was brought up on charges after the opposing team lodged a complaint through Kick It Out, which is English football’s anti-discrimination watchdog, the Telegraph said, adding that the trans player and the opposing team’s captain testified that the girl was persistently transphobic.

The outlet noted it has concealed the accused girl's identity due to her age and because she's "on the assessment pathway for autism."

'I raised a concern about the risk of serious injury as a 17-year-old girl playing against a biological male who was much larger than me and a very physical player, which was possibly a safety issue as I did not want to get dangerously injured right before the start of the new season.'

The girl admitted in a written statement submitted in her defense that she asked, “Are you a man?” to a player she described as having “a beard," the Telegraph reported. She also admitted asking the referee for guidance about the player’s eligibility to participate in women’s football “given my concern for my safety after already suffering a number of overly physical challenges," the outlet added.

However, the girl repeatedly denied her words constituted transphobia, the outlet said, adding that it is understood that the game's referee heard nothing he deemed discriminatory.

More from the Telegraph:

The girl said in her written statement she had become “confused” about the participation of the trans player during the match in question as the latter “wore jewelry and sunglasses” and was not in opposition kit.

She added: “The moment the player clarified they were transgender (which I previously hadn’t considered), I respected their answer fully, dropped the situation and immediately shifted my focus back to the game before seeking guidance from the referee. At no point was my question meant to be hurtful or malicious as I only intended to seek clarity in an unfamiliar situation. Knowing now that the player was transgender, I understand that there were better ways to approach this question.”

The girl also said the opposing team's captain accosted her during a water break, telling her that she shouldn't have an issue with playing against a transgender opponent, the outlet added.

“I raised a concern about the risk of serious injury as a 17-year-old girl playing against a biological male who was much larger than me and a very physical player, which was possibly a safety issue as I did not want to get dangerously injured right before the start of the new season," the girl said, according to the Telegraph. "Despite this, I made it clear that if the player met the eligibility criteria of the FA I would respect the rules and accept the risk involved in continuing to play the match. My safeguarding officer and the referee were both present for this conversation.”

The girl added that she was “truly disheartened that these allegations have been made against me," the outlet reported, adding that she also said "I have always supported and respected the diversity within my team, including members who are in the LGBTQIA+ community.”

The Telegraph added that the girl’s mother said none of her daughter’s teammates had been approached to make statements ahead of an upcoming hearing but that they were “100 percent behind her."

According to the outlet, the Football Association decided against publishing written reasons for the case.

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'We're biologically different': Women plead with United Nations to keep men out of their sports before someone gets 'killed'



Former athletes and activists spoke this week at a United Nations assembly urging the international body to encourage sanctions on men who try to compete in women's sports.

Olympic silver medalist Sharron Davies and former West Virginia athlete Lainey Armistead were among those who spoke at the Wednesday event in New York City, describing the obvious advantages men have over women in athletics.

'NO males at all in women's sport.'

"I'm here today because we've all seen what happens when males are allowed to compete on women's teams. ... It's demoralizing and unfair, and just plain wrong," Armistead said.

The soccer player explained that while West Virginia has laws that ensure only biological women can compete in women's sports, she still heard stories at her university about women getting hurt during competitions against men in female athletics.

"In just the last three years, the one male athlete who has been allowed to compete against girls in West Virginia has already displaced nearly 300 girls. And that's just one athlete."

Davies was much more blunt in her speech, speaking on the simple biological differences that should be seen as "common sense."

"Females are at a physical disadvantage," she said. "This doesn't mean that we're worse or better; it just means that we’re biologically different."

Davies is a former Olympic swimmer who won silver in Moscow in 1980, competing in three Olympics in total. She also won two gold, two silver, and two bronze at the Commonwealth Games between 1978-1990.

"I don't know a single person that wants to exclude anybody. However, we do want to see women have fair and safe sport. And we cannot wait until a woman is seriously injured or worse still, killed, to be able to deal with the science and the obvious and the common sense," she added.

Davies has consistently called for sex screening to return to the Olympics, stating explicitly that even in the 1970s it was a simple process.

"A sex screening test takes one minute once in your life only (because humans can't change biological sex) which is a simple swab to the inside of your cheek. I had one at the Montreal Olympics. Not at all intrusive especially when Olympic athletes have to consent to drug testing," she wrote on X in July.

"NO males at all in women's sport," she urged in September. "Inclusion is now exclusion of females from their own races by males!"

— (@)

Lawyers from the Alliance Defending Freedom — including Kristen Waggoner and Reem Alsalem, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women and Girls — joined the athletes.

Both called for the international sports community to ensure women can participate in athletics without being at risk of harm from men.

"Our plea to the world is to learn from the mistakes that have been made — and that are now being corrected — so that your daughters can walk into a future of fair and safe sports," Waggoner asked.

Alsalem, a longtime advocate in the space, said that the failure to protect the female category has been one of the most egregious forms of discrimination against women.

She added that the essence of being female has been "willfully pushed aside" despite the pain, distress, and humiliation women are facing at the hands of men who want to beat them in their own competitions.

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Tennis legend Martina Navratilova wipes floor with male reporter who called her 'transphobic'



Tennis legend Martina Navratilova blasted a male reporter who called her "transphobic" in connection with her stance against the inclusion of biological males who identify as female in female sports.

It began with a Friday report on X from writer Mitchell Northam about vandalization of the "Take Back Title IX" tour bus after its event in Chapel Hill. Northam's report said eggs were thrown at the bus and messages were written on it. One of the messages read, "Transphobic pu**ies."

'You can just go away now. Hope I see your nasty self at Wimbledon — if you are there.'

With that, another writer — Ben Rothenberg — jumped in and ripped the tennis great: "Martina Navratilova turning this anti-trans crusade into her life's obsession in recent years remains dispiriting! And she turns it into way more transphobic vitriol than just discussing sports fairness, as I've covered before, just being nasty and cruel and dehumanizing. Boo."

Navratilova caught wind of Rothenberg's critique and returned the favor: "Yet another man telling women what they should care about. And who are you exactly? Oh yeah, the reporter who tells tennis players it's off the record and then prints what they said anyway. Good to know you care about women’s sports and women’s sex-based spaces. I care."

Rothenberg wrote back to Navratilova, disputing her claims: "I’ve never done that. But I care also, about someone who was a beacon of freedom and inclusion in the sport I’ve covered sadly choosing to erode the platform she built with cyberbullying campaigns aimed at obscure, low-level amateur athletes. I wish you were better than that."

Not to be outdone, Navratilova dropped the big one on Rothenberg: "Cyberbullying — wow. I am blocking you once and for all. For your information, I am doing a whole lot more than just tweeting. You can just go away now. Hope I see your nasty self at Wimbledon — if you are there."

Rothenberg wasn't through, either: "(Been wild to see when these folks have swarmed my mentions how for so many of them, this issue has become their entire personality on this website. Fighting this trans boogeyman by trawling super obscure amateur sports events for examples becomes an obsession, a lifestyle.)"

Rothenberg's initial post on X was in ratio-land as of Monday afternoon — nearing a thousand comments compared to 630 likes.

Back in 2019, after Navratilova penned an op-ed saying that transgender females competing against biological women is "insane and cheating," an advocacy group for LGBTQ athletes — Athlete Ally — kicked Navratilova off its advisory board over her "transphobic" comments.

(H/T: Outkick reported)

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Twitter suspends account of female swimmer who said 'biological male' Lia Thomas 'stole' her finals spot



In a controversial move Monday, Twitter suspended the account operated by Virginia Tech University swimmer Reka Gyorgy, who only hours earlier had called for fans and fellow swimmers to boycott future competitions over the NCAA's decision to allow transgender University of Pennsylvania swimmer Lia Thomas to compete.

What are the details?

The suspension followed a tweet issued by Gyogry on Sunday in which the decorated collegiate swimmer complained that her slot in the NCAA finals had been "stolen" from her by Thomas, whom she accurately described as a "biological male."

"My finals spot was stolen by Lia Thomas, who is a biological male," Gyorgy wrote, adding, "Until we all refuse to compete nothing will change. Thanks for all the support retweets and follows I won't stop fighting."

As of early Monday afternoon, Gyorgy's account had been suspended.

Reka Gyorgy is a swimmer for VA Tech who lost her spot in the NCAA finals because a man was allowed to compete instead of her. \n\nShe protested. Twitter erased her voice. \n\nPlease think of her every time you use a preferred pronoun & convince yourself you\u2019re just being kind.pic.twitter.com/QCQaNuryLG
— Kaeley Triller (@Kaeley Triller) 1647881661

The social platform did not list the specific reason for the suspension but linked to a generic "Twitter Rules" webpage, where it noted that "violence, harassment, and other similar types of behavior discourage people from expressing themselves, and ultimately diminish the value of global public conversation."

"Our rules are to ensure all people can participate in the public conversation freely and safely," the platform added.

Users on the platform quickly decried the suspension.

"She protested. Twitter erased her voice," one user wrote. "Please think of her every time you use a preferred pronoun & convince yourself you’re just being kind."

"Twitter suspended Reka Gyorgy's account because she stated basic facts," another added.

Still, another said, "[The] message is clear. Sit down, shut up, and take it."

TheBlaze reached out to Twitter for more information about the suspension and will update this report with any response.

What's the background?

Lia Thomas, formerly Will Thomas, is a biologically male transgender athlete at UPenn who switched to competing as a female last year after three years of competing as a male at the university. Ever since the change, Thomas has been crushing competition and setting women's collegiate records.

Most recently, Thomas won first place at the NCAA championships for the 500-yard freestyle swim. It was in that race that Gyorgy placed 17th during preliminaries, one spot outside the group of 16 that would go on to compete in the finals.

Before her tweet, Gyorgy — a two-time ACC Champion and two-time NCAA All-American who competed in the 2016 Olympics for Hungary — had sent a letter to the NCAA, urging the organization to address the problem of biological males competing in female sports, arguing their inclusion is "hurting athletes, especially female swimmers."

She urged the NCAA to "open their eyes and change these rules in the future," adding, "It doesn’t promote our sport in a good way and I think it is disrespectful against the biologically female swimmers who are competing in the NCAA."

As a fifth-year senior, these past NCAA championships were the last collegiate races that Gyorgy would have the chance to compete in.

Swimmer calls for boycott after her NCAA finals spot was 'stolen' by 'biological male' Lia Thomas



Virginia Tech University swimmer Reka Gyorgy is calling on fans and fellow female swimmers to boycott future competitions in response to her place in the NCAA finals being "stolen" from her by "biological male" Penn St. University swimmer Lia Thomas.

What are the details?

Gyorgy — a decorated college athlete from Hungary who competed in the 2016 Olympics — was left on the outside looking in at the NCAA championships last week.

Her 17th-place finish in the 500-yard freestyle pushed her one spot out of finals contention for the race, which controversial transgender swimmer Lia Thomas would go on to win, posting the fastest time recorded all season.

It was Gyorgy's last chance to compete in the race in her collegiate career, and she reportedly posted one of her fastest personal times all season. But it wasn't enough.

In a tweet posted on Sunday, Gyorgy made her feelings on the matter clearly known.

"My finals spot was stolen by Lia Thomas, who is a biological male," she stated, adding, "Until we all refuse to compete nothing will change. Thanks for all the support retweets and follows I won't stop fighting."

My finals spot was stolen by Lia Thomas, who is a biological male. Until we all refuse to compete nothing will change. Thanks for all the support retweets and follows I wont stop fighting.
— Reka\ud83c\udfca\u200d\u2640\ufe0f (@Reka\ud83c\udfca\u200d\u2640\ufe0f) 1647810961

As of Monday morning, the message had been retweeted 42,000 times and liked more than 164,000 times. Thomas, who has raised the ire of women's sports supporters all season, was booed at the podium celebration.

What else?

Gyorgy's tweet followed a strong letter she sent to the NCAA this week regarding its transgender policy, according to SwimSwam.

In the letter, the two-time ACC Champion and two-time NCAA All-American urged the organization to address the problem of biological males competing in female sports, which she said is "hurting athletes, especially female swimmers."

"I’m writing this letter right now in hopes that the NCAA will open their eyes and change these rules in the future. It doesn’t promote our sport in a good way and I think it is disrespectful against the biologically female swimmers who are competing in the NCAA," she said.

"This is my last college meet ever and I feel frustrated," she continued, hearkening back to her failure to qualify for finals on Thursday. "It feels like that final spot was taken away from me because of the NCAA’s decision to let someone who is not a biological female compete. I know you could say I had the opportunity to swim faster and make the top 16, but this situation makes it a bit different and I can’t help but be angry or sad. It hurts me, my team, and other women in the pool."

Gyorgy added that she wasn't the only female swimmer who had a finals spot stolen by Thomas.

"One spot was taken away from the girl who got 9th in the 500 free and didn’t make it back to the A final preventing her from being an All-American. Every event that transgender athletes competed in was one spot taken away from biological females throughout the meet," she claimed.

She added: "The NCAA knew what was coming this past week. They knew opinions and minds will be divided and chose to do nothing."

Anything else?

Daily Wire reporter Mary Margaret Olohan posted the letter in full on her Twitter account and also linked to a clip of a teammate of Gyorgy's apparently describing her emotions after failing to qualify.

Pretty sure that the girl in this video was talking about Reka:https://twitter.com/RapidFire_Pod/status/1504577845494005767?s=20&t=6jcEJ2no4vxUVhLec0gecQ\u00a0\u2026
— Mary Margaret Olohan (@Mary Margaret Olohan) 1647801941

Gyorgy was described as being in tears after placing 17th in the race.