Transgender Athlete Wins Big after Switching from Men's Team to Women's
Biological male cleans up in woman's NCAA national track championship

A biological male, transgender woman athlete won big at a national track championship over Memorial Day Weekend, after switching from men's events to women's, according to reports.
After previously competing in men's event under the name Craig Telfer, CeCe Telfer now identifies as a woman and won the women's NCAA track national championship this year.
Craig Telfer was considered a pretty good hurdler and all-round athlete for the Franklin Pierce men’s track team last year, according to his stats, and finished second at the Greater Boston Track Club Invitational in the 60-meter hurdles as a junior.
Now identifying as a woman for this years' championships, 21-year-old CeCe is cleaning up in the female events.
Representing Franklin Pierce University (FPU), runner CeCe won the DII women’s 400-meter hurdles on Saturday night, crushing the second-place finisher's time by more than a second.
“Telfer is the first student-athlete in Franklin Pierce history to collect an individual national title,” the university boasted.
“It was tough conditions out here with the wind and the heat over the last three days but, as she has over the last six months, CeCe proved herself to be tough enough to handle it,” Zach Emerson, FPU's coach, said in a press release.
“Today was a microcosm of her entire season; she was not going to let anything slow her down,” Emerson said.
"I’ve never met anybody as strong as her mentally in my entire life."

According to the Daily Caller, Telfer’s victory came less than two hours after taking fifth place in the 100-meter hurdles. OutSports, a pro-LGBT sports website, touted Telfer as “a trans athlete who doesn’t win every time.”
Telfer previously ran a variety of events for Franklin Pierce’s men’s team, during most of which time he went by the first name Craig, according to school records.
Telfer competed on FPU’s men’s track team as recently as January 2018, according to published meet results from the Middlebury Winter Classic in Vermont.
Telfer had started using the name CeCe at that point, while still competing on the men’s team.
NCAA policy dictates that male athletes who identify as transgender can compete on women’s teams if they suppress their testosterone levels for a full calendar year.
Otherwise, so-called mixed teams — which have both males and females — can compete in the men’s division, but not in the women’s division, according to NCAA rules.

The NCAA in 2011 published an explainer calling it “not well founded” to assume “that being born with a male body automatically gives a transgender woman an unfair advantage when competing against non-transgender women.”
Telfer’s victory is just the latest instance of male athletes who identify as transgender entering — and then winning — female athletic events.
Two male runners have dominated girls’ high school track in Connecticut, which a female competitor described as “demoralizing.”
Rachel McKinnon, a biological male who identifies as transgender, won a women’s world championship cycling event in October.