

The women’s volleyball teams from Southern Utah University, Boise State University and the University of Wyoming have all chosen to forfeit games against San Jose State University (SJSU) rather than play against a biological male opponent who is pretending to be a woman.
The decision to forfeit their games is the latest in a fight to protect collegiate women volleyball players whose safety is at risk from men pretending to be women.
None of the schools went into detail regarding the decision to forfeit the games and instead take a loss, a decision likely based in a desire to avoid further controversy over National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) rules that allow players like SJSU’s Blaire Fleming to compete.
Fleming is a male who identifies as a woman and claims a female identity.
The 6-foot-1 senior has been playing for SJSU since 2022 and has been playing collegiate volleyball since 2020.
Concerns for the safety of female team members forced to compete against a male opponent include concerns over privacy in women’s spaces including the locker room and with sleep accommodations during overnight travel.
There’s also the matter of female players being harmed by male opponents who claim to be women.
As a high school volleyball player, Payton McNabb suffered a concussion and long-term physical and psychological harm after being spiked in the face by a cross-dressing male competitor.
McNabb has become an outspoken opponent of men competing in women’s sports and is proof that an 80 mph spike from a male rival does more than just hurt feelings.
The schools who chose to forfeit their volleyball games against SJSU were wise not to give social justice warriors enough information to convene formal struggle sessions over gender politics.
Until the NCAA stops enabling men competing in women’s sports, refusing to take part in someone else’s carefully constructed fantasy may be the best way to bring this particular delusion to halt.