Dawn Staley, the head coach of the undefeated South Carolina women’s basketball team, said on Friday that trans-identifying players should be allowed to participate against women as long as they “consider” themselves to be “a woman.”
Staley made her comments on men competing in women’s sports following the Gamecocks’ blowout win in the Final Four over NC State. Asked by Outkick reporter Dan Zaksheske to explain her position on “the inclusion of transgender athletes, biological males, in women’s sports,” the coach struggled to come up with an answer before saying she supports men competing against women.
“If you’re a woman, you should play; if you consider yourself a woman, and you want to play sports, or vice-versa, you should be able to play,” Staley said. “That’s my opinion.”
Zaksheske asked her to clarify if she believes trans-identifying men should be able to compete against women.
“That’s the question you want to ask, so I’ll give you that: Yes. Yes,” she responded. “So now the barnstorm of people are going to flood my timeline and be a distraction to me on one of the biggest days of our game, and I’m ok with that.”
I asked South Carolina head coach Dawn Staley if she supports transgender women (biological males) playing women’s college basketball.
“If you consider yourself a woman and you want to play sports or vice versa, you should be able to play.” pic.twitter.com/SEQCsNiFvm
— Dan Zaksheske (@RealDanZak) April 6, 2024
South Carolina’s win against NC State on Friday puts them in the national championship game, where they will face Iowa and star player Caitlyn Clark, who defeated UConn in a nail-biter. Staley’s team is currently 37-0 on the season and has breezed through the NCAA tournament. Staley has coached at South Carolina since 2008 and has won two national championships while reaching six Final Fours.
The national championship game is on Sunday at 3:00 p.m. ET.
While the controversy surrounding men playing in women’s sports has yet to directly affect Division I women’s college basketball, there have been numerous instances of men competing in sports against females and beating them in recent months. Earlier this year, multiple trans-identifying athletes took the floor with women in a college volleyball match in Ontario, Canada.
At Nazareth University in New York, trans-identifying track athlete Sadie Schreiner set a new school record in the 300m dash in December, clocking in at 41.80 seconds, which was also good for first place in the race. Schreiner reportedly competed in the same track event a year before as a male and finished in 19th place in the 100m dash.
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Men competing in women’s sports became a major issue in 2022 when UPenn swimmer Lia Thomas, who previously competed as a male, won a national championship title in the 500-yard freestyle over standout Virginia swimmer Emma Weyant.
The NCAA allows men to compete in women’s sports as long as they submit an “NCAA Transgender Student-Athlete Eligibility Review Form” and have a “testosterone level that is within the allowable levels for the sport in which the student-athlete plans to compete.”