Sanity: Thomas Eliminated From NCAA Woman Of The Year Competition

Maybe America isn’t losing its collective mind after all. Former Penn swimmer and transgender “woman” Will “Lia” Thomas has been eliminated in the NCAA Woman of the Year competition. A real, bona fide, chromosome-certified woman named Sylvie Binder has been name the Ivy League’s representative in the continuing competition. 

Fox News reports Binder would represent Ivy League. The NCAA is gradually reducing the list to 577. Columbia University’s fencer, Binder was a NCAA foil champion in 2019. This past season, she (emphasis on “she”) took fifth place at The Ivy League championships, second at the Northeast Regional and third in the NCAA Championships, finishing the season with a record of 17-6. Additionally, Binder won the 2022 Women’s Connie S. Maniatty Award winner as Columbia’s top senior student-athlete. 

Thomas sparked national outrage for being allowed to compete on the Penn women’s swimming team this past season after he previously spent three incredibly lackluster years on the men’s swimming team. An NPR/Ipsos poll showed that 63 percent of Americans opposed the allowance of men performing on women’s athletic teams. Thomas’ nomination by Penn as NCAA Woman of the Year was a resounding victory.  

Thomas, despite widespread opposition, unfairly won numerous conference and national championships. He used his size and strength to dominate female competition during a scandal-plagued season. He won the women’s national title in the 500-yard freestyle finals. 

Breitbart’s Warner Todd Huston wrote: “Thomas’ performance shocked college sports and brought the ire of teammates, 16 of whom joined in an anonymous letter to complain about the ‘unfair advantage over competition in the women’s category’ that Thomas represented.” 

Among the remarks in that public letter was the statement that “Biologically, Lia holds an unfair advantage over competition in the women’s category, as evidenced by her rankings that have bounced from #462 as a male to #1 as a female.” 

More recently, a former Thomas teammate told the Washington Examiner’s Christopher Tremoglie that Thomas is “mentally ill.” (The same could be said for Penn, the Ivy League and the NCAA). This came after Thomas tried, in a Good Morning America interview, to justify his undeserved place in women’s collegiate swimming. 

Among Thomas’s fans, Athlete Ally labeled the Thomas nomination “well-deserved.” Trans MMA fighter Fallon Fox tweeted of Thomas’s nomination, “Much deserved for her athletic achievements and influential leadership as a woman who happens to be trans.” One can only wonder what type of woman would consider Thomas an influential female leader. 

NCAA Woman of the Year award nominees must be graduating female student-athletes “who have distinguished themselves throughout their collegiate careers in the areas of academic achievement, athletics excellence, service and leadership.” 

Thomas may be able to tick the box for graduating senior, but not any other criteria. Manly hands would award the prize to Thomas if farce or dishonesty were a part of his criteria.  

After taking the 2021-2022 women’s season to outrageous LGBT-pleasing extremes, Thomas finally earned some comeuppance overdue with this NCAA elimination. 

Thomas would have not been surprised if the NCAA Woman of the Years competition had chosen her as the conference representative. The issue has been resolved. 

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