Trump says he is ‘proud to be president to save women’s sports’ after NCAA changes transport policy

President Donald Trump celebrated NCAA’s announcement of a new policy on Thursday that prevents transient athletes from competing in women’s sports after signing an executive order to solve the problem one day earlier.

Trump proclaimed himself “the president to save women’s sports” in a festive truth social post. He also suggested that the International Olympic Committee (IOC) will be the next major sports institution to follow his order.

“Due to my executive order, which I proudly signed yesterday, NCAA has officially changed their policy of allowing men in women’s sports – it is now forbidden! This is a lovely day for women and girls throughout our country,” wrote Trump.

“Men should never have been allowed to compete against women in the first place, but I am proud to be president of saving women’s sports. We expect the American people and the whole world!”

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NCAA’s previous politics, which had been in place in 2010, allowed biological men to compete in women’s sports after reviewing at least one year of testosterone oppression. The new policy says, “A student athlete who is awarded a man at birth may not compete on a women’s team.”

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Before Trump signed the order on Wednesday, the White House said press secretary Karoline Leavitt that part of the motivation behind Trump’s executive order would be to create a “preclim campaign” for the international Olympic committee (IOC) and NCAA to follow and prevent translowing athletes from compete in women’s sports.

During Trump’s ceremony in the White House to sign the executive order he announced that security secretary for the home country Christ’s Noem Will ban transsexual athletes trying to compete as women from entering the country to the 2028 Olympics.

Trump said he will instruct Noem “to deny anyone and all visa applications made by men trying to fraudulently enter the United States while identifying themselves as female athletes trying to get into the fighting.”

There was controversy about gender eligibility at Parisol in July and August.

Boxers IMane Khelif from Algeria and Lin Yu-Ting of Taiwan won gold medals in women’s boxing. Both athletes had previously been disqualified from international competitions for unsuccessful sex eligible tests. However, IOC and current President Thomas Bach expressed support for both athletes. The IOC also insisted that both athletes were biologically female.

Before that, Laurel Hubbard, a transgender woman, competed in weightlifting for the New Zealand team, and Canadian footballer Quinn came out as non -binary and transgender by 2020.

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When Bach was preparing to leave the office later this year, the IOC’s next president could help perform Trump’s vision of the issue more cooperatively.

Former British Olympic champion Sebastian Coe is a candidate to be the next IOC president and has suggested that he will intervene to prevent transgender’s inclusion in women’s events.

COE is the leader of the World Athletics, the governing body of international freedom. By 2023, the governing body tightened its rules on transient athletes to exclude transnry women who have undergone male puberty from competing in the female category. This regulation also lowered the maximum testosterone level for eligible female competitors.

President Donald Trump signs an executive order that prevents transient female athletes from competing in women or girls sporting events in the eastern space of the White House on Wednesday, February 5, 2025, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Coe said that if he becomes the IOC president, the new Olympic policy for transgender’s inclusion “probably” will reflect the one he has established in World Athletics. COE has also said that the controversy around Khelif and Yu-things made him feel “uncomfortable.”

The Fn Published study results say that almost 900 biological females have come to win medals because they lost to transient athletes.

The study, “Violence against women and girls in sports“Said more than 600 athletes medal in more than 400 competitions in 29 different sports, a total of over 890 medals, according to information obtained up to 30 March.

“The replacement of the female sports category with a mixed sex category has resulted in an increasing number of female athletes losing opportunities, including medals when competing against men,” the report said.

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