Fans Outraged as Transgender Swimmer Dominates Female Championships
Lia Thomas smashes biological females in Ivy League competition

Fans have been left outraged after the female events in the Ivy League swimming championships were dominated by a biological male transgender swimmer.
Lia Thomas, who was born male and, until recently, competed on the men's team, now "identifies" as "female" and competes in the women's events.
This week, Thomas, a University of Pennsylvania swimmer formerly known as Will Thomas, has been destroying other competitors in the championships.
Thomas crushed the women in the 500-yard freestyle finals by a full seven seconds.
The huge margin of lead amounted to half the pool’s length.
The "victory" was the second night in a row that Thomas posted a time no female swimmer in the meet could possibly match.

On Wednesday night, Thomas posted the fastest leg in the 800-yard freestyle relay, swimming the first leg of the race in 1:44:50, The Daily Mail reported.
"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.
🥇
— Penn Swimming & Diving (@PennSwimDive) February 19, 2022
Lia Thomas is the @IvyLeague Champion in the 200 free with a meet and pool record time of 1:43.12.#FightOnPenn 🔴🔵 pic.twitter.com/rNxanYF9bs
"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 tweeted.
She added, "…am I doing this right?"
This man is such a beautiful and empowering woman…
— Sara Gonzales (@SaraGonzalesTX) February 18, 2022
…am I doing this right? https://t.co/9djNlZH1rG
In mid-January, a young woman who is on Penn’s swim team with Thomas surmised in an interview with OutKick that Thomas and Henig colluded before the race in order for Henig to win and thus disprove the assumption that Thomas, as a biological male, could not be beaten by a biological female competitor.
The swimmer, who preferred to remain anonymous out of fear from activists, told OutKick, “Looking at [Lia’s] time, I don’t think she was trying.”
"I know they’re friends and I know they were talking before the meet,” she added.
"I think she let her win to prove the point that, ‘Oh see, a female-to-male beat me.’"
Asked if she thought Thomas and Henig had colluded, she replied, “I do.
"I can’t say for sure, but I wouldn’t be shocked if I found out that was 100% true.”
OutKick noted, “In the 100 freestyle race, Henig finished with a time of 49.57; Thomas touched the wall in 52.84.
"During a November tri-meet with Princeton and Cornell, Thomas swam the 100 freestyle in 49.42.”
Henig protested that the first time meeting Thomas in person was at the meet itself, adding, “In the fall semester, when some of the media stuff first started to come out, I saw it and I reached out over Instagram DMs just to introduce myself and offer a word of support,” The Hartford Courant reported.
"That was really the only connection we had."
In early February, 16 members of the Penn Women’s Swimming Team sent a letter to the University of Pennsylvania and the Ivy League asking them to refrain from suing the NCAA over its new Athlete Inclusion Policies that would bar Thomas from participating in the NCAA championships in March.
They stated, “We have been told that if we spoke out against her inclusion into women’s competitions, that we would be removed from the team or that we would never get a job offer.”
“The group, organized by three-time Olympic gold medalist Nancy Hogshead-Makar, sent the letter early Thursday morning asking UPenn and the Ivy League to support us as biological women’ and not engage the NCAA in legal action in an effort to challenge the new protocols,” Swim Swam reported.
“Hogshead-Makar says that the swimmers wrote the letter themselves, though both Hogshead-Makar, an organized group of parents, and other athletes, made edits before arriving at the final draft.”

In the letter, the swimmers noted, “Biologically, Lia holds an unfair advantage over competition in the women’s category, as evidenced by her rankings that have bounced from #462 as a male to #1 as a female.
"If she [Thomas] were to be eligible to compete against us, she could now break Penn, Ivy, and NCAA Women’s Swimming records; feats she could never have done as a male athlete.”
They continued:
Most important to us is that Lia’s inclusion with unfair biological advantages means that we have lost competitive opportunities. Some of us have lost records.
But even those that swim different events than Lia or were not in contention to make the Ivy Championships, we stand by our teammates who have lost out.
It has often felt like Penn, our school, our league, and the NCAA did not support us.
We have dedicated our lives to swimming.
Most of us started the same time Lia did, as pre-teens.
We have trained up to 20 hours a week, swimming miles, running and lifting weights.
To be sidelined or beaten by someone competing with the strength, height, and lung capacity advantages that can only come with male puberty has been exceedingly difficult.