With a demonstration at an NCAA event, the group hopes to” Keep Women’s Sports”

  • A number of groups marching at the NCAA Convention in Phoenix’s monthly “Our Bodies, Our Sports” protest on Thursday
  • Since a few years ago, the issue has divided the United States, with detractors asserting that trans athletes have an advantage over cisgarender girls.
  • Riley Gaines, a former University of Kentucky diver, and Paula Scanlan, an ex-teammate of Lia Thomas, did both participate in the protest.

Protest plan to protest outside the NCAA’s annual agreement and demand an end to trans athletes competing in sexual activities in an effort to “keep womens activities.”

Riley Gaines, a former University of Kentucky diver, Paula Scanlan, the colleague of trans athlete Lia Thomas, as well as numerous parents, students, and activists from both conventional and “liberal female” organizations will participate in the rally.

Scanlan claimed that she and her friends are fighting for dignity in their respective sports while speaking exclusively to Daily Mail.com.

I was forced to undressed in front of a person every day before getting in the lake at Penn because I had experienced sexual assault, she said. Due to its disregard for women’s athletics, the NCAA supported this ongoing stress. We implore the NCAA to restore women’s respect.

Since a few years ago, the issue has divided the United States, with detractors asserting that trans athletes have an advantage over cisgarender girls. in competition and at least 23 states passing laws to create space in sports only for a person’s gender assigned at birth.

The Independent Women’s Forum, however, is one of the organizations that contends that Charlie Baker, the new president and former governor of Massachusetts, has done nothing to defend people.

Groups hoping to 'save women's sports' plan to rally outside the NCAA's annual convention this week with demands to end what they call discriminatory practices allowing transgender people to compete with cisgender women
UPenn swimmer Paula Scanlan (pictured)  said she and her allies are fighting for dignity in their chosen sports. 'As a survivor of sexual assault, I was forced to undress in front of a man every day before getting in the pool at Penn,' she said. 'The NCAA sponsored this repeat trauma through its failure to recognize women's sports. We beg the NCAA to give women our dignity back'
Lia Thomas triggered a wave of controversy after switching over to the women's team at UPenn in 2021

At the yearly “Our Bodies, Our Sports” protest on Thursday at the NCAA Convention in Phoenix, a number of companies, including The Independent Women’s Forum, did move.

Scanlan, who started swimming when he was eight years old, wants to spread the word about transsexuals taking part in sexual divisions.

She and Thomas, who competed in female activities at the University of Pennsylvania, used to swim together. Thomas ‘ involvement in the activities sparked a contentious discussion about athletes competing as people other than their biological gender.

Even after being forced to share a changing space, Scanlan admitted to having nightmares for weeks.

We Won’t Back Down will be the rally’s design, according to organizers, and it will symbolize “the resolve of female players and coaches” to compel the NCAA to take action.

They intend to send Baker a desire letter that calls for the NCAA’s Transgender Student-Athlete Participation Policy to be repealed, allowing transgender student athletes to compete however they please based on testosterone levels.

Thomas set seven UPenn women's teams records (five individual) and won three individual events at the Ivy League Championships in February 2022
The rally will include former University of Kentucky swimmer Riley Gaines, possibly the most prominent activist for women's spaces in sports
The rally will have a 'We Won't Back Down' theme that organizers told DailyMail.com will reflect 'the determination of female athletes and coaches' to force the NCAA to act

Gaines, who has spoken in Congress and across the nation on behalf of children’s sports areas, claims that the march is about respect for student athletes.

“Adult players spend their entire lives competing in activities, only to have the NCAA sabotage our level playing field.” This debases women in general and female athletes, she claimed.

Similar to age and weight groupings, sex-based types are crucial for competitive sports. We are not making many demands of the NCAA. Maintain the justice required for health and competition.

The NCAA has set challenges ahead of their march this month, obtaining a force to block off the road in front of and surrounding the convention center, according to spokesman for the website.

When the NCAA had to send out a memo last month stating that everyone was “safe” from their march, they claimed to have witnessed evidence of their strength.

However, in an effort to prevent the NCAA’s discrimination, organizers said they would encircle the area with LED trucks, individuals carrying walking banners, double-sided rally signs, shirts, and hats.

The IWF claims Baker, the former Republican government of Massachusetts who took over the NCAA in March, will not talk to them. Baker is the target of their indignation.

“We’ve had a lot of players writing letters to Charlie Baker,” who claimed to have spoken to hundreds of student athletes in his testimony before the Senate in October. Vice President of Communications Victoria Coley told Daily Mail.com that he hasn’t bothered to speak with any of the female athletes who have spoken out against NCAA policy, such as Riley and Paula.

Protesters have turned their ire toward Charlie Baker, the ex-Republican Governor of Massachusetts who took over the NCAA last March, and whom the IWF says refuses to listen to them
A spokeswoman for the forum said the NCAA has placed challenges ahead of their rally this year, obtaining a permit to block off the road in front of and surrounding the convention center
The IWF said they'll surround the Phoenix Convention Center with LED trucks, people with walking banners, double-sided rally signs, shirts, hats in an attempt to stop the NCAA's discrimination

Daily Mail.com has contacted the NCAA for comment.

According to the community, they’ve made a lot of development in the year since their last protest, including the anger that swimmers at Virginia’s Roanoke College caused when athletes were forced to swim with transgender women.

Coley added that she thinks Mark Emmert, Baker’s father, supports their cause and that “Progress is we’re growing in numbers and Charlie Baker sees the writing on the wall.”

“One may defend us. If women are forced to tell men to stop discriminating, Charlie Baker or another person may make a difference. Coley continued,” We’re trying to schedule a personal appointment.

There are individuals on the NCAA’s governing board who are with us; it really comes down to them being capable officials.

Since 2010, the NCAA has allowed trans athletes to compete.

According to the latest NCAA regulations, a person must undergo 12 months of testosterone suppression therapy and post serum testosterone test results that show levels that are below the sport’s maximum.

According to Jennifer C. Braceras, vice president for legal scheme at Independent Women’s Form and the creator of the independent womens law center, “Shame on Charlie Baker for continuing to uphold this unfair policy.”

The group says they've made a ton of progress in the year since their last rally
The group says they've made a ton of progress in the year since their last rally, including the outrage fueled by swimmers at Virginia's Roanoke College, where Kate Pearson (left), Lily Mullens (center) and Bailey Gallagher (right) athletes held a press conference after being forced to swim with a transgender woman

The NCAA is not required by Title IX, but the institutions that make up its participation are, and the NCAA has a duty to assist its member institutions in upholding equal opportunity laws rather than violating them.

The laws governing sports are mishmash and uneven.

In November 2021, the International Olympic Committee renounced its past requirement that trans people suppress their hormone levels for at least a year in order to compete and said it was up to individual sports to decide their own rules.

In contrast, World Athletics (WA), the organization in charge of track and field events, announced in March of this year that athletes who have experienced “male puberty” are not allowed to compete in female world rankings events.

The exclusion, according to WA, would also apply to “male-to feminine transgender athletes who have gone through female puberty.”

Coley remarked, “This roster of speakers is outstanding, and we have seen speed in this movement to keep women’s sports and saying that many women have come out in the last time.”

“Brave parents, coaches, and sports are speaking out and joining.” Until the NCAA stops being discriminatory, we won’t back down.