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Swimmers Blast Lia Thomas' 'Champion' Title as 'Illegitimate' after FINA Rule Change

Former teammate and competitor speak out after trans athletes banned from female events

 on 22nd June 2022 @ 11.00pm
swimmers argue that lia thomas s  wins  are  illegitimate  © press
Swimmers argue that Lia Thomas's 'wins' are 'illegitimate'

Swimmers are blasting transgender Lia Thomas's "wins" and "champion" title as "illegitimate" after the International Swimming Federation (FINA) banned biological males from female events.

Earlier this week, FINA issued stringent new restrictions on transgender swimmers, effectively banning men from competing as women.

Following FINA's ruling, a former teammate of Thomas, along with a rival team member who once tied with Thomas, blasted the transgender college swimmer’s championship title as "illegitimate."

On Monday, FINA released a new “gender inclusion policy.”

The new rules only allow transgender swimmers who transitioned from male to female before age 12 to compete in women’s events.

"I’m very hopeful about it,” Thomas’s teammate, who was granted anonymity out of fear of attacks from the Left, said of the new restrictions.

"I am incredibly happy that Lia Thomas will never be an Olympic gold medalist," the teammate added.

"I think that’s great.

"But this doesn’t actually fix the NCAA [National Collegiate Athletic Association]."

Thomas, 22, previously competed as a mediocre swimmer on the men’s team at the University of Pennsylvania before coming out as transgender in 2019 and starting testosterone blockers and estrogen.

After little success competing as a man, Thomas was a record-smashing "champion" swimmer while "identifying" as a "female."

Thomas started competing on the women’s team last year, sparking a national debate.

In March, Thomas won the NCAA Division I national championship after winning the women’s 500-yard freestyle event.

The NCAA’s current policy allows biological males to compete on women’s teams after completing just one year of testosterone suppression treatment.

Thomas’s teammate said she “would love” for the NCAA to rescind Thomas’s championship title, although she’s doubtful that will happen.

Even if the NCAA follows FINA’s lead and restricts transgender athletes on women’s teams, Thomas will likely be “grandfathered in,” the teammate said, adding that she finds that “ridiculous.”

Riley Gaines, a University of Kentucky swimmer, tied with Thomas for fifth place in the 200-yard freestyle final at the NCAA championship in March.

She left the competition that day with a sixth-place trophy after the NCAA decided to give Thomas the fifth-place trophy.

“I believe Lia is not the fastest female in the 500-yard freestyle, therefore I don’t think she should be awarded as a female national champion,” Gaines said.

Gaines said the NCAA “needs to take accountability” and follow FINA’s lead on restricting transgender athletes on women’s teams, which she called “a bold first step on behalf of fairness in women’s sports.”

“FINA prioritized competitive fairness which is more than any other large governing body has done thus far,” Gaines said, adding that she appreciated that FINA took into account science and the perspectives of other athletes.

“The only downfall is now that there is a set age to be transgender and allowed to compete as a female, will children be more swayed into transitioning without fully understanding what they’re doing and committing to?” Gaines asked.

Thomas’s anonymous teammate also praised FINA for listening to the science, but voiced a similar concern that young swimmers could be pushed into transitioning earlier.

“The boys are actually slower than the girls under the age of 12," she said.

"So scientifically speaking, that is actually the correct year to pick."

"Socially, I don’t agree with that.

"I think really, scientifically, this policy makes a lot of sense, and I’m also really happy that it’s also going to be put into place in water polo,” she said.

"Water polo is a very aggressive sport.

"People get their suits pulled down. They get clawed.

"I definitely don’t want to see biological men on women’s water polo teams.”

Thomas’s teammate also said that she had to share a locker room with Thomas while they were on the team together and is concerned about the larger issue of allowing biological men into female-only spaces.

She added that just because Thomas did not win every single event does not mean the national champion did not enjoy an unfair advantage.

“There have been a lot of athletes that have been caught for doping and they didn’t necessarily win gold,” Thomas’ teammate said.

[RELATED] Lia Thomas Teammate: Transgender Swimmer's Male Genitalia Exposed in Locker Room

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