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A California High School Girls volleyball team lost a match against a team that is believed to include a biologically male trans athlete on Friday night.
Riverside Poly High School in Riverside County, California, announced his perdition against the Jurupa Valley High School in a statement.
“Riverside Poly High Schools Girls Volleyball team will not take the right to tonight’s scheduled games against the Jurupa Valley High School,” the statement states.
“This battle will be recorded as a perdition in non-leagues. We understand that this is disappointing for our athletes, families and followers, and we appreciate the community’s understanding. We remain obliged to provide a safe, positive environment for all student athletes throughout the season.”
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No reason was given to the forfeiture in the statement.
Amanda Vickers, a member of the Riverside Unified School District Board, Pakinomist Digital told me she believes the forfeiture is in response to Jurupa Valley, including Trans Athlete AB Hernandez on her list. Hernandez was listed on the Jurupa Valley’s list last season and is believed to be on the security list again this year.
“I think it’s because they play AB Hernandez and that a decision was made that the students would not,” Vickers said. “I got a message yesterday that there [were] parents [of players] There was wearing ‘Save Girls Sports’ shirts. So they were kind of prepared for a protest today. ”
Teenager girls open up on trans-athlete scandal that made their high school a cultural war battlefield
Vickers added that she believes that the forfeiture was significant for the safety of the female athletes, referring to former high school volleyball player Payton McNabb, who suffered permanent brain injury when she was hit in the head with a tip from a trans athlete in 2022.
“What this is about is that there is a difference between biological girls and biological boys. And tonight, the girls from Riverside Polly High School, they won’t end up as Payton McNabb,” Vickers said.
Jurupa Unified School District made a statement to Pakinomist Digital that addressed the forfeiture.
“We were informed that Riverside Poly High School canceled today’s scheduled girls volleyball match with Jurupa Valley High School. They did not reveal the reason. We have no further comment at this time,” the statement states.
Pakinomist Digital has reached the Jurupa Valley High School Head Volleyball Coach Liana Manu and Hernandez’s mother for a response.
Riverside became a fireplace for controversy involving trans-athletes in Girls Sports last year during Hernandez’s high public season, and after a trial was brought by two girls at Martin Luther King High School, who is alleged that a Trans athlete took one of girls varsity spots on the cross-country team. The students at the school then started wearing T-shirts “Save Girls Sports” every week in response, after school administrators allegedly compared the shirts with swastikas, according to the trial.
Hernandez was the focus of a national media Firestorm in May during the athlete’s race for a California’s girls course and field championship. The autumn season meets that Hernandez competed in, was met with protests by female athletes and their families, often wearing “Save Girls Sports” jerseys.
Hernandez’s race apparently pulled a response from President Donald Trump, who published a truth of truth this week led to the state final, suggesting that the state did not allow the Trans to compete. Hernandez won the championship in the girls High Jump and Triple Jump at a meeting that saw an LGBTQ demonstrant arrested for allegedly assault by a conservative activist and a plane flying over his head with a banner saying “No boys in the girls’ sport.”
The US Department of Justice then filed a lawsuit against California’s Education Department (CDE) and California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) for its policies that have enabled biological men to compete in girls sports throughout the state, despite Trump signing an executive order in February to ban it.
ONE Bipartisan Survey By the Public Policy Institute of California, a majority of California residents found against biological male trans athletes competing in women’s sports.
This number included more than 70% of State school parents.
“Most Californians support that those who require transnry athletes compete for teams that matched the gender they were assigned at birth,” the vote states.
“Solid majorities in adults (65%) and probably voters (64%) support that requires transking athletes to compete on teams that match the gender they were assigned at birth, not the gender they identify with. An overwhelming majority of public school parents (71%) support such a requirement.”



