Two dozen young women have quit an Australian soccer league after officials allowed one team to add five transgender athletes, some of whom went on to injure girls on other teams.
Parents rose up in anger last month after the Flying Bats Football Club added the five male-born players to their girl’s soccer team and then went on a tear winning every single game for the pre-season Beryl Ackroyd Cup tournament in the Sydney, Australia-based league.
“Flying Bats FC won every game they played over the course of the four-week competition, winning the grand final 4-0 at Macquarie Park on Sunday to take home the $1000 jackpot,” it was reported.
Pictured: NSW Women's soccer team The Flying Bats FC featuring FIVE trans players that destroyed opposition 10-0 on way to winning grand final - with one biological male scoring SIX goals in one game. https://t.co/IHUtGFX2Ii
— Elia Santoro 💙 (@Elia_Santoro) March 28, 2024
“Club officials have also contacted Football NSW to express their concerns, with some insisting that the Flying Bats should play in the mixed competition, which includes men,” the report continued.
The Flying Bats claim to be a gay-focused team. But, some of the males playing as females have gone on to injure their female opponents on the field, according to Reduxx.
The mounting alarm over the dangerously overpowering ringers placed on the Flying Bats is leading to a large-scale walk out, as well.
One of the five men on the women’s football team is transgender activist Riley Dennis, who has been accused of injuring women on other teams.
Frank Parisi of the St. Patrick’s Football Club recently revealed that one female player was suspended from the league for daring to criticize the transgender players and for voicing concern over the physical danger they represent to women on other teams.
Frank Parisi of the St. Patrick's Football Club spoke about how many players he had lost during a recent North Sydney Football Association meeting.
— REDUXX (@ReduxxMag) April 2, 2024
Parisi also revealed that one woman was suspended for making a transphobic remark after her friend was injured by a male player. pic.twitter.com/VLPWqe3eSH
In an audio recording to a recent meeting of team leaders, Parisi described that physical danger.
“A couple of year ago, one of the Flying Bats players broke one of our players’ legs in a game. It was a clumsy tackle from behind. Our player had her leg broken in two places and she’s no longer playing football. It was a direct result of a real bad, tall player… he didn’t get a red card. Accidents happen, but this could have been avoided,” Parisi said.
“One of our players rushed over to try to help her, she was screaming in so much pain. At that time, she made a derogatory remark to the Bats player, which we apologized for. [She was] suspended. The Bats player, nothing happened to [him],” Parisi said, adding that the girl was suspended for eight games.
Parisi also insisted that 24 women had quit the league rather than play against the Flying Bats male ringers.
“They’ve all said to me, ‘Frank, we do not want to play against the Bats players.’ I’m going to say it straight, there’s men playing in a women’s competition. And that’s wrong,” he said.
The league, though, has rules against “discrimination” against men playing as women.
Football Australia’s Anti-Discrimination Policy states that “excluding people on the basis of their sex and / or gender identity status from participation in a competitive sporting activity” is prohibited.
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