Women athletes don't compete vs. transgender in Team USA track event, giving default victory to trans athlete
XX-XY Athletics released a video calling out the NCAA over a perceived lack of clarity about its new transgender athlete policy.
Transgender track and field athlete Sadie Schreiner took first place at the USA Track and Field (USATF) Open Masters Championships in the women's 400-meter dash in New York Saturday
The other participants in the event, Anna Vidolova and Amaris Hiatt, have no recorded times and are listed as DNS, did not start.
Schreiner is 21 years old, while Vidolova is just 17, and Hiatt is 16.
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After the 400-meter race, Schreiner competed in the women's 200-meter dash and also won first place. Schreiner defeated 14-year-old runner-up Zwange Edwards, 16-year-old third-place finisher Zariah Hargrove, 15-year-old Leah Walker and 18-year-old Ainsley Rausch.
That event also had multiple participants listed as DNS, including 18-year-old Jordan Carr, 46-year-old Amanda Taylor, Vidolova again and 16-year-old Paula Damiens.
Sadie Schreiner puts a transgender flag in her hair before heading to the awards stand after finishing third in the finals of the 200-meter race at the 2024 NCAA Division III outdoor track and field championships at Doug Shaw Memorial Stadium May 25, 2024, in Myrtle Beach, S.C. (Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post via Getty Images)
USATF policy allows trans athletes to compete in the women's category in compliance with Internatonal Olympic Committee (IOC) policy. However, USATF "requires that certain medical benchmarks be achieved before an athlete may compete as the opposite gender for medals, prize money and other benefits."
Fox News Digital has reached out to USATF for comment.
Schreiner previously competed for Rochester Institute of


