After Poor Show­ing On Boys Team, Male Switch­es To Girls Var­si­ty And Takes First

A high school-aged trans­gen­der-iden­ti­fy­ing track ath­lete report­ed­ly came in last place against junior var­si­ty boys two years before switch­ing to com­pete against var­si­ty girls and tak­ing home first place.

Zachary Rose, who now iden­ti­fies as Lia Rose, for­mer­ly com­pet­ed against boys at Ida B. Wells High School in Port­land, Ore­gon, accord­ing to a New York Post report. But after switch­ing to girls’ var­si­ty, Rose recent­ly won the high jump at the Port­land Inter­scholas­tic League Var­si­ty Relays with a height of 4 feet, 8 inch­es. The ath­lete best­ed the girls in the com­pe­ti­tion by at least two inch­es.

Cit­ing athletic.net, the Post not­ed that Rose, while com­pet­ing on boys JV track in 2023, fin­ished dead last with a jump of 4 feet, 6 inch­es.

Rose com­pet­ed against males in 2024, too, before appar­ent­ly switch­ing to com­pete against girls.

Despite pro­po­nents of boys in girls’ sports sug­gest­ing it’s exceed­ing­ly rare that trans-iden­ti­fy­ing ath­letes are tak­ing oppor­tu­ni­ties and tro­phies from girls, these events are becom­ing more and more com­mon. And in turn, females are refus­ing to com­pete in protest, cit­ing safe­ty and fair­ness.

As The Dai­ly Wire report­ed this week, a female fencer was recent­ly dis­qual­i­fied from a tour­na­ment in Mary­land after she took a knee and refused to com­pete against a trans­gen­der-iden­ti­fy­ing male oppo­nent.

Red­mond Sul­li­van, who is male and iden­ti­fies as trans­gen­der, was allowed to par­tic­i­pate in the female tour­na­ment per USA Fenc­ing rules, the orga­ni­za­tion con­firmed to The Dai­ly Wire. Sul­li­van for­mer­ly com­pet­ed with males, but quick­ly won the top prize at Con­necti­cut Divi­sion Junior Olympic Qual­i­fiers last year after switch­ing to female fenc­ing, accord­ing to the Dai­ly Mail.

In anoth­er recent exam­ple high­light­ed by The Dai­ly Wire, a female pro­fes­sion­al disc golf ath­lete walked off the course dur­ing a Nashville com­pe­ti­tion over her con­cerns about a trans-iden­ti­fy­ing male play­er.

“Females must be pro­tect­ed in our divi­sion,” Abi­gail Wil­son said as she walked away from the course. “This is unfair. I refuse to play.”

Relat­ed: ‘Most Like­ly End­ed My Career’: Disc Golfer Who Protest­ed Trans Com­peti­tor Says She Has No Regrets