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Former NCAA hurdler wants her ‘stolen’ championship back

Former track and field athlete Minna Svärd He is asking the NCAA to award her a 2019 victory that she says was “stolen” from male athletes participating in the women's division.

Svärd raced at East Texas A&M University in 2019 on the women's 400 metre hurdle and was the fastest woman at NCAA Division II School.

Svärd wrote Op-Ed for the Wall Street Journal, attended a subsequent interview on the race at the NCAA Championship, and posted a time of 59.21 seconds. Unfortunately, a male athlete named Cece Telfer also took part in the race, with 57.53 hours. beat her Up to 1.68 seconds.

“It's been five years since that honor was stolen from me,” he said. I wrote it. “I want to get that back.”

Swedish athletes were also revealed on An Interview Within two years, Megyn Kelly became the top female hurdler after Telfer was said to have ranked 390th in the male competition. male It stands towering His competition at the event was side-by-side comparisons of female athletes who were tragic to watch the footage.

“My dreams have been taken away from me again.”

Telfer was told by a progressive activist after his victory and received his honor.”Pioneering actions“Athletics sports. He was soon paraded into the network. CNN and CBS He celebrated him with alleged struggles as a black woman.

In 2024, athletes promised vengeance in response to criticism, saying they would return to women's sports and take more records from female athletes.

“My dreams have been taken away from me again, so I'm planning to go back to New England and attack all indoor competitions, take all names, all records, and everything,” he said in an interview.

Editing the record

Svald praises President Trump Presidential Order He said the aim is to prevent men from competing in women's sports, but that the orders have not yet been progressing well. She added that official results of past competition should be revised to match the reality that it is the result of male competitors.

However, the Ministry of Education made the exact same declaration in February. The agency has sent a letter to the NCAA requesting that the records or awards given to men in the women category be returned to the actual winners.

The letter defined such awards or records as “incorrectly credited to a male athlete.”

Svärd reflects many feelings shared by female athletes who had the opportunity to be taken by men who pretended to be women, including the fact that male athletes reject at least one female athlete each time they enter or participate in a female event.

This claimed that more than 600 female athletes lost male athletes to their podium positions in 29 sports categories, according to a 2024 UN survey.

Svärd is still waiting for her championship to be returned to her, but she quoted the unfortunate admiration she can't take:

“It made me the first university woman to be told that her victory was less valuable than men's feelings.”

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