High school girl claims first-place podium spot despite losing to trans athlete

500231671 122242105988064385 7216566115493364149 n

500293584 122160385448582322 5214583713276298118 n

May be an image of 1 person and text that says 'AI "I'm sick of this": High school girl defies results stands on first-place podium desipte losing to trans athlete'

A controversial moment at a California high school track meet is reigniting the national debate over transgender athletes in women’s sports. During the CIF Southern Section Finals, Crean Lutheran’s Reese Hogan took a symbolic stand by stepping onto the first-place podium, despite finishing second in the triple jump behind AB Hernandez, a transgender athlete.

Hernandez, who identifies as female, dominated the event with a jump over four feet longer than Hogan’s, also winning the long jump and placing in the high jump. After Hernandez left the podium, Hogan stood on the top step, a move captured in viral footage that sparked widespread debate online.

The issue has become deeply political. Donald Trump recently signed an executive order banning transgender women from competing in female sports, while some states like Maine refuse to follow. Critics argue transgender athletes have an unfair advantage, while supporters say the real issue lies with the rules, not the athletes.

image 312

Hernandez responded to the backlash, calling it “ridiculous” and defended her right to compete. Some studies suggest trans athletes don’t consistently outperform cisgender peers, but the controversy continues to fuel division.

image 311

Reese Hogan’s silent protest has added fuel to a national conversation that is far from over.