The latest controversy in women’s sports comes out of New York, where a transgender runner at the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) is being accused of shamelessly boasting after obliterating biological female competitors in a recent college track meet.

Sadie Schreiner, a male athlete competing on the women’s roster, posted footage over the weekend showing a lopsided victory that has sparked outrage among critics of transgender participation in female sports. The video, which quickly spread across social media, captures Schreiner surging ahead of four female runners as a voice cheers, “Go Sadie!” in the background.

Despite the clear physical advantage on display, Schreiner’s caption suggested frustration with the performance, claiming it wasn’t the desired result.

“Not the race I was looking for at all this week,” Schreiner wrote. “My spikes nearly fell off on the turn, and with a poor start, my time wasn’t nearly what I wanted. The good news is that the season just started, and I’m going to leave everything on the track at nationals.”

The post was met with a wave of criticism, with many pointing out the absurdity of a biological male competing against women and then lamenting an “off” performance after effortlessly winning.

“Proud of you for beating women who are a foot shorter and 60lbs lighter with a 2ft smaller stride and half the muscle mass. You didn’t look like you had it in you still,” one user sarcastically commented.

Others expressed frustration over the impact of male-born athletes taking spots away from deserving female competitors.

“Love trans [people] but this hurts to watch. Decent run, but competing against biological females and potentially taking away a scholarship discredits their hard work and discounts your physical ability,” another person wrote.

Many called for a separate division for transgender athletes, pointing out that at the collegiate level, the increasing number of male-born athletes competing against women is making fair competition impossible.

This latest case reignites the debate about fairness in women’s sports, with conservatives and female athletes alike calling for common-sense policies to protect fairness. Time and again, male-bodied athletes who identify as female have entered women’s divisions and dominated events, setting records and pushing young female competitors out of opportunities they have trained their entire lives for.

Schreiner’s win is just another example of what happens when radical gender ideology trumps biology in sports. Women are being sidelined, their accomplishments devalued, and their futures put at risk—all while activists insist that “inclusion” matters more than fairness.

If this trend continues, women’s sports will cease to exist as we know them, reduced to a participation trophy for male-born athletes who could never cut it in men’s competition.