I see a push by Cardosa and a no call with an official standing close by. This is followed by a Reese elbow to Cardosa's face resulting in an intentional foul ( could have been disqualifying ). That elbow caused Cardosa's mouth to bleed for the remainder of the game. Less than a minute earlier...
Tac may not play unless she completely recovers from injury by fall. If she does play it will be limited. If Dawn doesn't get Beers or someone comparable I think Feagin will be our post.
#6 in her 2026 class McKenna Woliczko gives a shout out to Dawn. This 6'2" forward already has a SC offer and her father says he hopes she becomes a gamecock...
Go back to post 5162 and watch the video I posted regarding intersex. It's been a part of my discussion from the beginning. If you believe that players who genetically test as males should be excluded from women's basketball then that applies to both trans and intersex.
Intersex people are born with sex characteristics (such as sexual anatomy, reproductive organs, hormonal patterns and/or chromosomal patterns) that do not fit typical binary notions of male or female bodies. Experts estimate that up to 1.7 percent of the population are born with intersex traits.
Many people with intersex also identify as transgender. In either case they would test genetically opposite of how they were raised and/or opposite of what they identify as. The treatment of both can be very similar.
If you had a daughter raised as a girl with female genitalia but found out at the age 14 that the reason she didn't develop breasts or a period was because of internal testicles. I hope you're smart enough to understand that your best decision would be to have those testicles surgically removed...
There are no transgender ( male to female ) individuals playing NCAA women's basketball. What I'm seeing in this thread is fear mongering and a lack of compassion for others.
What parents and their family physicians decide to do with their children's treatment has nothing to do with the NCAA regulations.
It would take one of your own with intersex or trans to understand what they go through.