Lia Thomas — a biologically male swimmer who identifies as female — favored to win two NCAA women's championship events this week



Lia Thomas — a biological male who identifies as female — is favored to win a pair of women's swimming events at the NCAA Championships this week.

What are the details?

The transgender University of Pennsylvania athlete has been at the center of controversy for the last several months in regard to biologically male athletes who identify as females competing against biological women.

Thomas, 22, set several records at the Ivy League Championships last month with victories in the 100, 200, and 500-yard freestyle women's events, Fox News said. In fact, Thomas finished a whopping seven seconds ahead of the second-place swimmer in the 500 freestyle:

Lia Thomas is the @IvyLeague champion in the 500 free. Her time of 4:37.32 is a new pool record.\n\nCatherine Buroker finishes in second.\n\n#FightOnPennpic.twitter.com/ki2SQdxn6Q
— Penn Swimming & Diving (@Penn Swimming & Diving) 1645141245

Thomas also is favored to win the 200 women's freestyle at the NCAAs, Fox News said, adding that Thomas also may upset in the 100 freestyle as the the 10th-seeded swimmer.

The NCAA updated its transgender policy in January, deferring to guidance in each sport’s governing body, Fox News said. USA Swimming updated its policy shortly after requiring transgender athletes competing at an elite level to show testosterone levels equating to half of what Thomas was allowed to compete with for at least 36 months before being eligible, the cable network added. However, the NCAA decided weeks later that it wouldn’t alter its testosterone guidance, stating that "implementing additional changes at this time could have unfair and potentially detrimental impacts on schools and student-athletes intending to compete in 2022 NCAA women's swimming championships," Fox News said.

A mixture of outrage and support has followed Thomas ever since the swimmer began making headlines several months ago:

Anything else?

The women's NCAA swimming championship events begin Wednesday. Here's the schedule for individual events in which Thomas is competing:

  • 500-yard freestyle (preliminary, 10 a.m. Thursday; finals 6 p.m. Thursday)
  • 200-yard freestyle (preliminary, 10 a.m. Friday; finals 6 p.m. Friday)
  • 100-yard freestyle (preliminary, 10 a.m. Saturday; finals 6 p.m. Saturday)

Transgender swimmer continues dominating at Ivy League Championships, winning 200 free by more than 2 seconds



Following a decisive victory during a 500 free Thursday at the Ivy League Women's Swimming and Diving Championships, transgender University of Pennsylvania swimmer Lia Thomas, a biological male, wiped out the competition again on Friday by finishing a 200 free more than 2 seconds ahead of the second-place finisher.

"Lia Thomas is the @IvyLeague Champion in the 200 free with a meet and pool record time of 1:43.12," a tweet from Penn Swimming & Diving declared.

Lia Thomas is the @IvyLeague Champion in the 200 free with a meet and pool record time of 1:43.12.\n\n#FightOnPenn pic.twitter.com/rNxanYF9bs
— Penn Swimming & Diving (@Penn Swimming & Diving) 1645230565

On Thursday, Thomas had delivered an even more dramatic drubbing, winning a 500 free more than seven seconds ahead of the second-place finisher.

"As it turns out, men are incredible at women's swimming," Ben Shapiro tweeted about Thomas' victory in the 500 free.

"And so the shameful destruction of women’s rights to equality & fairness continues," Piers Morgan tweeted.

"This man is such a beautiful and empowering woman…," BlazeTV host Sara Gonzales of "The News & Why It Matters" tweeted. She added, "…am I doing this right?"

This man is such a beautiful and empowering woman\u2026\n\n\u2026am I doing this right?https://twitter.com/pennswimdive/status/1494456818474565638\u00a0\u2026
— Sara Gonzales (@Sara Gonzales) 1645196125

Each win Thomas takes from the female competitors helps to bolster the argument of critics who contend that biological men should not be allowed to compete in women's sports.

While the issue has been a topic of cultural contention for years, the controversy surrounding Thomas has drawn attention to the subject.

Thomas delivered a particularly decisive victory back in December, winning a 1650 free by about 38 seconds.

Transgender swimmer destroys competition at Ivy League Championships, winning 500 free by more than 7 seconds



University of Pennsylvania swimmer Lia Thomas, a biological male, wiped out the competition while competing against women in a 500-yard freestyle on Thursday, taking the win at the Ivy League Championships after finishing the race more than seven seconds ahead of the second place finisher.

The decisive victory provides further evidence to critics who contend that biological males should not be allowed to compete in athletic events designated for women.

Lia Thomas is the @IvyLeague champion in the 500 free. Her time of 4:37.32 is a new pool record.\n\nCatherine Buroker finishes in second.\n\n#FightOnPennpic.twitter.com/ki2SQdxn6Q
— Penn Swimming & Diving (@Penn Swimming & Diving) 1645141245

While racing a leg in an 800-yard freestyle relay on Wednesday, Thomas barely finished in first, edging out a Iszac Henig of Yale, a biological woman who identifies as a transgender man. While Thomas won the leg, Penn ultimately finished the race in third, according to swimmingworldmagazine.com.

Thomas participated in a 200 free relay on Thursday, but the team came in fourth.

While many Americans already oppose allowing men to compete in women's sports, the controversy surrounding Thomas has drawn significant attention.

The swimmer annihilated the competition in December by finishing a 1650 free, clocking in more than 38 seconds ahead of the second-place finisher.

According to data collected across 13 Gallup polls conducted in 2021, 7.1% of U.S. adults identify as LGBT — only 10% of U.S. LGBT adults identify as transgender, which amounts to 0.7% of all U.S. adults, according to Gallup.