Sports
Trump vs. transgenders
NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles! President Donald Trump stirred the hearts of the University of Alabama graduates when he reaffirmed his promise to “keep men out of women’s sports.” During a commencement speech at the university’s graduation ceremony on Thursday night, Trump gave a shutout to the school’s SEC champion women’s track […]

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President Donald Trump stirred the hearts of the University of Alabama graduates when he reaffirmed his promise to “keep men out of women’s sports.”
During a commencement speech at the university’s graduation ceremony on Thursday night, Trump gave a shutout to the school’s SEC champion women’s track and field team before igniting a raucous applause by “vowing to defend women’s sports.”
“As long as I’m president, we will always protect women’s sports. Men will not play in women’s sports,” Trump said before the crowd erupted in cheers for its loudest and longest applause of the night.
“No way. They say it’s an 80-20 issue. No, it’s a 97-3 issue, I think,” Trump said. “No, men will not be playing in women’s sports. I said that, and I classified it with a very powerful executive order, as you know. It’s done.”
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Later in the speech, Trump circled back to the subject, mocking Democrats for allowing trans athletes in women’s sports and trans athletes themselves in a lengthy rant.
During this section of the speech, Trump also discussed the Paris Olympics women’s boxing competitions, which included two gold medalists who were previously disqualified from international competitions for failing gender eligibility tests. However, neither boxer, Algeria’s Imane Khelif and Taiwan’s Lin Yu-ting, identifies as transgender.
“They had a great champion, a female boxer, and after one punch she walked back to the corner and said, ‘I can’t get hit like that, I’ve never been hit like that before,” Trump said.
At one point, Trump did a physical impersonation of a female weight lifter and a trans weight lifter, and reenacted a scenario where the female loses a competition to a trans opponent.
Then Trump took aim at transgender swimmers, telling the story of a swimmer who he joked was “windburned” by a trans opponent.
“One young lady, she was going to set the record, she fought all her life to set the record,” Trump said. “Then she looks to the right, and she sees the same thing, but there’s a person next to her who’s a giant … that was a person that transitioned, and he had the wingspan of Wilt ‘the Stilt’ Chamberlain.”
Trump made similar references to the weightlifting and swimmer scenarios in June 2023 while speaking at the North Carolina Republican Party Convention in Greensboro.
On Thursday, Trump also referenced female volleyball players who have been affected by trans inclusion.
“You look at all the volleyball players who have been hurt so badly, that are hit at levels that they’ve never seen before,” Trump said.
One former University of Alabama women’s volleyball player, Brooke Slusser, was thrust into a situation where she had to share a locker room and bedroom with a trans athlete when she transferred from the university to San Jose State University in 2023. In a lawsuit, Slusser alleges she was made to share those spaces with trans teammate Blaire Fleming without being told Fleming was a biological male.
HOW TRANSGENDERISM IN SPORTS SHIFTED THE 2024 ELECTION AND IGNITED A NATIONAL COUNTERCULTURE

Graduating students listen to President Donald Trump’s speech at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa on May 1, 2025. Trump’s remarks came the day before official commencement ceremonies. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
Slusser has since left San Jose State University and returned home to Texas after facing alleged backlash and harassment in the aftermath of filing her lawsuit.
Trump signed the Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports executive order on Feb. 5. One day later, the NCAA revised its gender eligibility policy to restrict participation in the women’s category to only biological females. However, the new policy has also come under criticism by some women’s sports activists for not going far enough.
Alabama has had a state law in place since 2021 to prevent trans athletes in girls’ sports. In 2023, it was extended to include college students. Unlike other laws addressing the issue, Alabama’s law also bars athletes assigned as female at birth from participating in the boys’ category unless there is no comparable girls’ opportunity (such as football).
Trans inclusion in women’s and girls’ sports emerged as a hot-button issue in Trump’s 2024 election victory as most Americans came to take the Republican’s side on the topic.
A national exit poll conducted by the Concerned Women for America legislative action committee found that 70% of moderate voters saw the issue of “Donald Trump’s opposition to transgender boys and men playing girls’ and women’s sports and of transgender boys and men using girls’ and women’s bathrooms” as important to them.

President Donald Trump delivers remarks to graduating students at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa on May 1, 2025. (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
Six percent said it was the most important issue of all, while 44% said it was “very important.”
The issue inspired a national counterculture movement against Democrat policies that keep trans athletes in women’s sports, heavily influenced by young college-educated women. Biden’s 35-point lead over Trump among young women in the 2020 presidential election cycle shrank to a 24-point margin for Trump’s 2024 opponent, Vice President Kamala Harris, per an NBC News exit poll.
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President Donald Trump delivers commencement remarks at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa on May 1, 2025. (SAUL LOEB/AFP via Getty Images)
A New York Times/Ipsos survey found the vast majority of Americans, including a majority of Democrats, don’t think transgender athletes should be permitted to compete in women’s sports.
Of the 2,128 people who participated, 79% said biological males who identify as women should not be allowed to participate in women’s sports. Of the 1,025 people who identified as Democrats or leaning Democrat, 67% said transgender athletes should not be allowed to compete with women.
Nearly 70% of Americans say biological men should not be permitted to compete in women’s sports, according to a Gallup poll last year.
In June 2024, a survey conducted by NORC at the University of Chicago asked respondents whether transgender athletes of both sexes should be permitted to participate in sports leagues that correspond to their preferred gender identity instead of their biological sex. In that survey, 65% answered that it should never or rarely be allowed. When those polled were asked specifically about adult transgender female athletes competing in women’s sports, 69% opposed it.
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Sports
Ethan Strand Named Bowerman Semifinalist
NEW ORLEANS – Ethan Strand’s historic track season continues to bring home more awards as he was named a semifinalist for The Bowerman Award by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association on Thursday, June 26. This is the second straight season in which a Tar Heel has been named a semifinalist, following […]

NEW ORLEANS – Ethan Strand’s historic track season continues to bring home more awards as he was named a semifinalist for The Bowerman Award by the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association on Thursday, June 26.
This is the second straight season in which a Tar Heel has been named a semifinalist, following Parker Wolfe’s selection last season. The Bowerman, which debuted in 2009, is named after former Oregon Head Coach Bill Bowerman and is presented annually to the most outstanding male and female NCAA track and field athletes in the nation.
Strand’s historic track season kicked off by setting two NCAA records in his first two races of the year. He is the only student-athlete to set the NCAA record in the mile (3:48.32) and the 3000m (7:30.15) in the same year. Strand won the Atlantic Coast Conference title in the men’s 5000m, setting the meet record (13:26.60). Strand was also part of the national runner-up DMR squad that set an unratified American Indoor Record (9:17.17), earning First Team All-American honors. He followed that up by winning the national championship in the men’s 3000m (7:52.03).
After the indoor season, the national champion received numerous awards, including the ACC Indoor Men’s Track Athlete of the Year and the USTFCCCA Southeast Region Men’s Indoor Track Athlete of the Year. Strand also became the first Tar Heel to win USTFCCCA National Men’s Indoor Track Athlete of the Year. Shalane Flanagan won the award for the Tar Heels in cross country in 2002 and 2003.
The historic success continued into the outdoor season as he ran the second-fastest 1,500m time in NCAA history (3:33.22) at the Duke Twilight. Strand entered the postseason on a high note. The senior became the first Tar Heel and only the fourth in ACC history to win the 1,500 three times at the ACC Outdoor Championships. Strand was also the ACC runner-up behind his teammate Wolfe in the 5,000m. Strand earned a spot at the NCAA Outdoor Track and Field Championships in the 5,000m and 1,500m. Strand finished as the national runner-up in the 1,500m, earning his third First Team All-America honors of the year.
For all the latest UNC track and field news, photos, and videos, follow on X, Instagram, and Facebook
Sports
BGSU volleyball releases 2025 non-conference schedule – BG Falcon Media
BGSU volleyball has unveiled its non-conference schedule for the 2025 season, which includes several home matches and a handful of invitationals and tournaments. For their first match of the year on Aug. 23, the Falcons will take on the squad from Youngstown State, a faceoff that hasn’t occurred since 2018 and one in which the […]

BGSU volleyball has unveiled its non-conference schedule for the 2025 season, which includes several home matches and a handful of invitationals and tournaments.
For their first match of the year on Aug. 23, the Falcons will take on the squad from Youngstown State, a faceoff that hasn’t occurred since 2018 and one in which the Falcons are currently undefeated.
After that, the Orange and Brown will be traveling to North Dakota for the NDSU/UND tournament, where they will see Temple, North Dakota State, and St. Mary’s in that order. The tournament will take place from Aug. 29-30.
Bowling Green will continue to face off against big-name opponents on the road, taking on Kansas, Purdue, and Georgia Tech in that order in the Stacey Clark Invitational, hosted by the Boilermakers, from Sept. 3-5.
Then, another road trip for the Falcons, this time to Chicago, where BGSU will face off against Indiana, Stephen F. Austin, and Loyola in the Loyola Invitational, which will be from Sept. 11-13.
BG returns to the Stroh Center on Sept. 17 to host Oakland. The Falcons have historically defeated the Golden Grizzlies, including a sweep in their last meeting in 2021.
Lastly, before conference play begins, the Orange and Brown will participate in a three-team invitational hosted by Michigan State from Sept. 19-20. Bowling Green will face off with the Spartans and Binghamton, a team BG just beat in the first round of the NIVC last season.
The 2024 non-conference schedule was demanding on the Falcons, who went 5-6 against strong opponents, including number 22-ranked Dayton.
It may be a new year, but the strength of the schedule remains unchanged, with many of BGSU’s opponents in 2025 coming from major conferences.
Sports
Mulllings Named Semifinalist for Prestigious The Bowerman
NORMAN – Oklahoma track and field junior and NCAA discus champion Ralford Mullings was named a semifinalist for the prestigious The Bowerman, the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association announced Thursday. The honor is bestowed to collegiate track and field’s top male and female athlete for the year. Semifinalists are determined by […]

Semifinalists are determined by members of The Bowerman Advisory Board, who have produced watch lists throughout the season and have provided a ranked-ordered list of 10 athletes who they believe had the most outstanding season. The list of semifinalists represents the group’s consensus.
Mullings is the first Sooner in men’s program history to be named a semifinalist for the prestigious award. Prior to Mullings, women’s thrower and four-time NCAA champion Tia Brooks (2010-13) was Oklahoma’s only semifinalist, having earned the selection in back-to-back years in 2012 and 2013.
Mullings, who hails from Kingston, Jamaica, claimed the NCAA Outdoor Championships discus throw title June 14. He tossed the discus for a PR of 69.31m (227’5.00″) to shatter a 33-year-old meet record and surpass world record holder Mykolas Alekna of California. Mullings’ improvement cements his status as the No. 2 performer in collegiate history, his 69.31m (227’5.00″) mark sits ninth on the all-time collegiate chart. He is the first Sooner in program history to earn a national title in the discus throw and earned Oklahoma’s first individual outdoor championship since 2009.
On Monday, Mullings was named the NCAA Division I National Field Athlete of the Year by the USTFCCCA. He becomes the first discus thrower to win the national award since Ryan Whiting in 2010 and is the first Sooner in men’s program history to be named national athlete of the year.
The junior bolstered his impressive season with the SEC Outdoor Championships discus title and three facility records at Baylor, Kentucky and Texas. Mullings currently holds two of the top-10 farthest throws in NCAA history.
The Bowerman Advisory Board will assemble to deliberate who will be named finalists and will announce the three honorees July 8. The winners are chosen by voters and are set to be announced at the USTFCCCA Convention in Grapevine, Texas, December 18.
Men’s Semifinalists
Mykolas Alekna, California (Discus)
Jordan Anthony, Arkansas (Sprints)
James Corrigan, BYU (Mid-Distance/Steeple)
Nathaniel Ezekiel, Baylor (Sprints/Hurdles)
Ishmael Kipkurui, New Mexico (Distance)
Carlie Makarawu, Kentucky (Sprints)
Ralford Mullings, Oklahoma (Throws)
Brian Musau, Oklahoma State (Distance)
Ethan Strand, North Carolina (Mid-Distance/Distance)
Ja’Kobe Tharp, Auburn (Hurdles)
CONNECT WITH THE SOONERS
For more information on Oklahoma Track & Field, follow the Sooners on Twitter and Instagram (@OU_Track) and like Oklahoma Sooners Track & Field and Cross Country on Facebook.
Sports
Kailua grass volleyball tournament returns with record-breaking teams | Sports
…MINOR COASTAL FLOODING DURING HIGH TIDE THIS WEEK… .Peak monthly high tides combined with water levels that are running higher than predicted will lead to minor flooding along the shoreline and in low-lying coastal areas. Coastal flooding is expected around the daily peak tide this afternoon. …COASTAL FLOOD STATEMENT REMAINS IN EFFECT THROUGH THIS AFTERNOON… […]

...MINOR COASTAL FLOODING DURING HIGH TIDE THIS WEEK... .Peak monthly high tides combined with water levels that are running higher than predicted will lead to minor flooding along the shoreline and in low-lying coastal areas. Coastal flooding is expected around the daily peak tide this afternoon. ...COASTAL FLOOD STATEMENT REMAINS IN EFFECT THROUGH THIS AFTERNOON... * WHAT...Isolated minor coastal flooding. * WHERE...Portions of Kahoolawe, Kauai, Lanai, Maui, Molokai, Niihau, Oahu and the Big Island. * WHEN...Through this afternoon. * IMPACTS...Flooding of beaches that are normally dry, minor coastal erosion, and saltwater inundation. PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS... Avoid driving through flooded roadways. If you are forced to drive through salt water, be sure to rinse your vehicle with fresh water. Move electronics, vehicles or other valuables to higher ground. Monitor vessels to ensure mooring lines don't get too tight and watch out for overwash around boat ramps. Secure canoes or other watercraft stowed on beaches. && Submit your coastal flooding photos to the University of Hawaii; Sea Grant College Program's Hawaii and Pacific Islands King; Tides Project at:; PacificIslandsKingTides.org
Sports
Lesnar Named Bowerman Award Semifinalist
FORT COLLINS, Colo. – On the heels of a historic season, Colorado State thrower Mya Lesnar has been named one of 10 finalists for The Bowerman Award – the top honor in collegiate track and field. Beginning in 2009, The Bowerman – named after legendary track and field coach and co-founder of Nike, Inc. […]

Beginning in 2009, The Bowerman – named after legendary track and field coach and co-founder of Nike, Inc. Bill Bowerman – is bestowed to collegiate track and field’s top male and female athlete of the year. The Bowerman Advisory Board, and ultimately, The Bowerman Voters, are instructed to consider performances inclusively from the collegiate indoor track & field and outdoor track & field seasons only.
Lesnar has produced a resume worthy of being considered among the top 10 women for the prestigious award, becoming the first Ram from either CSU program to be named a semifinalist.
The crown jewel of her 2025 campaign was the dominant performance that won the NCAA outdoor shot put national championship two weeks ago at Hayward Field in Eugene, Ore. Entering the meet as the heavy favorite, Lesnar surpassed 19 meters on her first attempt (19.01) – a mark only she was able to reach across the entire outdoor season – and secured the second national title of her career. Lesnar’s second-best attempt of 18.87 would also have put her atop the podium.
Add to the list a fourth-place finish in the shot put at the NCAA Indoor Championships, a pair of First Team All-America honors, two conference shot put gold medals, and the fifth-best outdoor shot put throw in NCAA history (19.60/64-feet-3.75 on May 3) and Lesnar’s case becomes even stronger.
The Bowerman will announce its three finalists for the award on July 7, with the winner announced on Thursday, December 18 at the U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association (USTFCCCA) Convention in Grapevine, Texas.
Sports
Edna Karr Football and Slidell Volleyball honored as New Orleans’ top prep teams – Crescent City Sports
Allstate Sugar Bowl Recognizes State Champs in a Pair of Sports NEW ORLEANS (June 26, 2025) – The Slidell volleyball team, which became the first public school to win the Division I state title since 2011, have been selected as the Allstate Sugar Bowl’s Outstanding Prep Teams from the Greater New Orleans area for 2024-25. […]

Allstate Sugar Bowl Recognizes State Champs in a Pair of Sports
NEW ORLEANS (June 26, 2025) – The Slidell volleyball team, which became the first public school to win the Division I state title since 2011, have been selected as the Allstate Sugar Bowl’s Outstanding Prep Teams from the Greater New Orleans area for 2024-25.
The New Orleans Sports Awards Committee, sponsored by the Allstate Sugar Bowl, has selected Sugar Bowl Athletes of the Month and each year’s Allstate Sugar Bowl Sports Awards Banquet presented by LCMC Health on August 2. Honorees are currently being announced, wrapping up with the New Orleans’ Outstanding Girls Prep Team of the Year were Haynes Volleyball and St. Scholastica Swimming. Haynes came together behind sisters Virginia and Marilyn Voitier to upend top-seeded Hannan to capture the LHSAA Division III state championship in the school’s first-ever trip to the state title match. St. Scholastica’s swimming dominance continued as the Doves used a balanced effort to tally 365 points, 91 points ahead of second-place to win their 14th straight Division II team title at the LHSAA state swim meet.
The other finalists for the Jimmy Collins Awards: Brian Marelo, Hahnville
Hank Tierney, Archbishop Shaw Football
Courtney Ward, Sacred Heart Basketball
My-Anh Holmes, Willow Tennis
Kade Anderson, LSU Baseball
Edna Karr Football
Slidell Volleyball
Eddie Robinson Award – July 7 (Monday)
Corbett Award – Female: July 9 (Wednesday)
Shan Foster, Basketball, Bonnabel HS/Vanderbilt/NBA, 2001-13
Joe McKnight, Football, John Curtis Christian School/USC/NFL, 2004-16
www.AllstateSugarBowl.org.
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