Should be a truncheon analysis, but let that pass.
A 6′ tall, bearded trans basketballer arrogantly slams a young girl to the ground…. she collapses in agony. RILEY GAINES hits back: We used to call this domestic abuse – so why are we now calling it ‘sport’?
Daily Mail UK | February 22, 2024 | Riley GainesRiley Gaines is a former NCAA swimmer, the host of OutKick’s Gaines For Girls podcast and an ambassador for Independent Women’s Forum.
We used to have a name for violence against women and girls.
When men punched, pushed or slapped us, that was ‘domestic abuse’, ‘assault’.
Now it has a different name – ‘sport’.
The latest exhausting headline: a girls basketball game at a Massachusetts high school had to be abandoned earlier this month after three female players were injured at the hands of a trans student.
Footage of the incident at the Collegiate Charter School of Lowell is shocking.
We see one girl hurled to the ground by a six-foot male, sporting facial hair.
The male wrenches the ball from her hands. The girl – barely reaching the male’s shoulder height – is slammed down.
She tries to sit up repeatedly but collapses each time, holding her lower back in agony.
Other girls run over to comfort her but the male player simply turns away, nonchalantly shooting the ball through the net with one hand, catching it with the other.
Related story —
Coach of the Year:
Girls’ high school basketball coach banned for forfeiting game over transgender player has no regrets: ‘Asking for injury’
New York Post | Feb. 27, 2024 | Yaron SteinbuchThe coach of a Vermont high school girls basketball team that was banned from state athletics after forfeiting a game against a squad with a trans player defended the decision — stressing the danger of a biological male playing against girls.
“I’ve got four daughters. I’ve coached them all at one point in their careers playing high school basketball,” Chris Goodwin, coach of the girls’ team at the Mid-Vermont Christian School, said Monday on “Fox & Friends.”
“I’ve also filled in for the boys’ coach when he can’t make a practice, and I run those practices, and boys just play at a different speed, a different force … than the girls play. It’s a different game,” he said, adding that it would be “irresponsible” and “asking for an injury” to a smaller female athlete.






