Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jul 5
NCAA Keeps 2025 Transgender Athlete Policy After Supreme Court's 6-3 Sports Ruling
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jul 5

NCAA Keeps 2025 Transgender Athlete Policy After Supreme Court's 6-3 Sports Ruling

3 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jul 5

Summary

  • Charlie Baker said the NCAA does not expect to change its transgender-athlete rules after the Supreme Court upheld state bans on transgender girls competing in women’s sports.
  • The 6-3 ruling backed West Virginia and Idaho laws requiring athletes to compete based on sex assigned at birth, giving the NCAA no reason to alter what Baker called its national standard.
  • That standard was adopted in February 2025 after Trump’s "No Men in Women’s Sports" executive order and allows athletes assigned male at birth to practice with women’s teams while receiving team benefits.
  • Critics say the policy still leaves loopholes because altered birth certificates could affect eligibility, an issue with 44 states allowing birth-sex changes on those documents.

Insights

With conflicting state and federal rules, can the NCAA's 'national standard' for transgender athletes truly exist?
The Supreme Court cited 'inherent physical differences.' Can science settle the debate on athletic fairness for transgender women?
Beyond sports, what does the Court's narrow ruling signal for the future of broader transgender rights in America?