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NCAA changes transgender policy to limit women’s competition to athletes assigned female at birth

Updated February 6, 2025 - 4:46 pm

The NCAA changed its participation policy for transgender athletes on Thursday, limiting competition in women’s sports to athletes who were assigned female at birth.

The move came one day after President Donald Trump signed an executive order intended to ban transgender athletes from girls’ and women’s sports.

The NCAA’s decision was hailed by former Kentucky swimmer Riley Gaines, a vocal advocate of banning transgender athletes from women’s sports.

Gaines, who was at the White House signing ceremony with Trump, was among more than a dozen college athletes who filed a lawsuit against the NCAA last year, accusing it of violating their Title IX rights by allowing transgender woman Lia Thomas to compete at the national championships in 2022.

“I can’t even begin to tell you how vindicating it feels knowing no girl will ever have to experience what my teammates and I did,” Gaines posted on X shortly after the NCAA announced the policy change.

The order gives federal agencies latitude to withhold federal funding from entities that do not abide by Title IX in alignment with the Trump administration’s view, which interprets “sex” as the gender someone was assigned at birth.

The NCAA policy change was announced hours after the Trump administration said it was investigating potential civil rights violations at two universities and a high school sports league that allowed transgender athletes to compete on women’s teams.

The Education Department said it had opened reviews of San Jose State University, the University of Pennsylvania and the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association.

San Jose State’s women’s volleyball team drew headlines last season over unconfirmed allegations that the roster included a transgender player.

As for Penn, three former teammates of Thomas, the transgender swimmer, this week sued the NCAA, Ivy League, Harvard and the school over Thomas’s participation at conference and national championships, saying it violated Title IX provisions.

The complaint says that by allowing Thomas to compete, Penn, Harvard, the Ivy League, and the National Collegiate Athletic Association “deprived” the swimmers of “equal opportunities as women to compete and win.”

It also says that by providing Thomas with access to the women’s locker room, the schools and organizations failed to protect the privacy of the swimmers.

Sia Liilii, captain of the Nevada volleyball team that refused to play San Jose State this season, said she was “ecstatic” about the new NCAA policy.

“Women have fought long and hard for equal athletic opportunities,” Liilii said. “By completely removing men from women’s sports, we are moving back to the true definition of Title (IX). Women are given an opportunity to champion their own sports division and shine on a fair competition floor.”

The NCAA policy change is effective immediately and applies to all athletes regardless of previous eligibility reviews. The NCAA has some 1,100 member schools with more than 500,000 athletes, easily the largest governing body for college athletics in the United States.

“We strongly believe that clear, consistent, and uniform eligibility standards would best serve today’s student-athletes instead of a patchwork of conflicting state laws and court decisions,” NCAA President Charlie Baker said. “To that end, President Trump’s order provides a clear, national standard.”

The previous NCAA policy went into effect in 2022 and adopted a sport-by-sport approach, where transgender participation was determined by the policy of the sport’s national governing body. In sports with no national governing body, that sport’s international federation policy would be in place. If there is no international federation policy, previously established IOC policy criteria would take over.

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