A jaw-dropping moment at a California high school track meet is sparking outrage and reigniting fierce debate across the country.
During the CIF Southern Section Finals, Crean Lutheranâs Reese Hogan took a bold stand â literally â by stepping onto the first-place podium, even though she finished second in the triple jump.
The reason? Hogan was edged out by AB Hernandez, a transgender athlete who was born male but now competes as female.
War on womenâs sports?
The debate over transgender athletes in womenâs sports is tearing the nation in two. Supporters say itâs about inclusion, identity, and basic human rights â but critics warn itâs a direct threat to fairness and the integrity of womenâs competition.
Now, the issue isnât just a cultural flashpoint â itâs a political one, too. In February, former President Donald Trump took a bold stance by signing an executive order that bans transgender women from competing in female sports divisions.
Trump declared, âThe war on womenâs sports is over,â vowing that during the upcoming LA Olympic Games, âmy administration will not stand by and watch men beat and batter female athletes.â
The move, unsurprisingly, ignited a nationwide firestorm â and not every state is falling in line. Maine, for example, has openly refused to ban transgender athletes from participating in womenâs sports.
And now, a viral moment out of California has reignited the explosive debate.
The footage
At the CIF Southern Section Finals on May 18, Crean Lutheran High Schoolâs Reese Hogan took a defiant stand.
Though she finished second in the triple jump, Hogan returned to the podium after the official ceremony and stood tall on the top spot âleft empty after the eventâs winner, outspoken transgender athlete AB Hernandez, exited.
The scene, captured in viral footage, quickly made the rounds online. For many, it symbolized frustration over what they see as an unfair playing field.
Hernandez, a biologically male athlete who identifies as female, dominated the competition with a jump of 41 feet, 4 inches â over four feet ahead of Hogan.
Hernandez, from Jurupa Valley High School in California, also won the long jump and placed seventh in the high jump, qualifying for the CIF Masters Meet scheduled for May 24.
The internet was quick to react.
âThis guy won the girls long jump and triple jump in a CA track meet over the weekend,â wrote Jennifer Sey, founder of womenâs sports advocacy group XX-XY.
âHe won the triple jump by 8ft. Heâs really crushing it!â
âWow, what an accomplishment. Iâm sure it had nothing to do with being a biological male,â snarked Trending Politics co-owner Colin Rugg.
Others joined in, echoing a growing wave of criticism.
âSecond place is the real champion!â one person posted. âGood on her! This nonsense has to stop,â another added.
A blunt sign spotted at the meet read:
âThe weakest men compete with girls, the weakest minds celebrate it.â
Another user chimed in:
âIâm sick of this. All the fight for womenâs rights is now gone by the same people who fought for womenâs rights in the first place.â
String of controversies
The backlash is the latest in a string of controversies tied to transgender athletes competing in womenâs events. Many point to previous high-profile incidents, including one in North Carolina that left lasting consequences.
Back in 2022, 17-year-old volleyball player Payton McNabb suffered a traumatic brain injury after being struck by a spike from a transgender player. Her mother later said:
âAt the time, we werenât allowed to speak up. We couldnât say, âNo, sheâs not playing against a boy, itâs dangerous.ââ
The McNabb case helped spur North Carolina lawmakers to pass legislation banning transgender athletes from participating on girlsâ and womenâs sports teams at the middle, high school, and college levels.
But not everyone is on board with that kind of policy. Over 400 current and former Olympic athletes signed a letter urging the NCAA not to enact similar bans, saying they wanted to be on the âright side of historyâ and asserting that sports should remain âfor all.â
Meanwhile, Hernandez brushed off the outrage, calling it âridiculous.â
âThe mere fact that men compete against women is absurd,â one critic argued online. âTrans people should have their own league, and regular, normal people can have their traditional menâs and womenâs sports.â
âTrans girls are girlsâ
But others defended the young athleteâs right to compete.
âShe followed all the rules,â one user wrote. âIf people donât like it, the problem is with the rules, not with her.â
âTrans girls are girls,â another added. âHernandez won fair and square.â
In a recent interview with Capital & Main, Hernandez opened up about the wave of backlash sheâs faced during a rollercoaster track and field season â one thatâs included standout finishes as well as moments where she didnât even make the podium.
âIâm still a child, youâre an adult, and for you to act like a child shows how you are as a person. All I thought was, âI donât think you understand that this puts your idiotic claims to trash. She canât be beat because sheâs biologically male.â Now you have no proof that I canât be beat.â
According to Capital & Main â an award-winning nonprofit outlet covering major economic, environmental, and social issues in California â studies suggest that transgender athletes have not consistently outperformed their cisgender peers. In fact, by several metrics, transgender women were shown to be at a disadvantage compared to cisgender women.
The issue shows no sign of going away anytime soon. With more states pushing for bans and high-profile athletes weighing in on both sides, the fight over the future of womenâs sports is far from settled.
And because of Reese Hoganâs silent podium protest, it just got a whole lot louder.