Craig “CeCe” Telfer is a man attending Franklin Pierce University, who sucked in his chosen sport, and placed near last in every competition he entered – so what did Craig do? Train harder? No.
“Prior to joining the women’s team this season, Telfer was a mediocre [Division II] athlete who never came close to making it to nationals in the men’s category. In 2016 and 2017, Telfer ranked 200th and 390th, respectively, among [Division II] men in the 400 hurdles (Telfer didn’t run outdoor track in 2018 as either a man or woman).
Now she’s the national champion in the event simply because she switched her gender (Telfer’s coach told us that even though she competed on the men’s team her first three years, her gender fluidity was present from her freshman year).”
Cheater Craig Telfer couldn’t beat other men on a level playing field, so Craig Telfer decided to pretend that he is a woman to allow him to compete against females, who he might have a chance of beating.
“The fact that Telfer can change her gender and immediately become a national champion is proof positive as to why women’s sports needs protection.” – LetsRun.com
Competing as a man, Craig “CeCe” Telfer reportedly finished 8th out of 9 competitors, but Craig won the 400-meter hurdles the year he started cheating to compete as a woman.
The NCAA needs to do the right thing and stop the destruction of women’s sports by biological men, with Gender Dysphoria, being allowed to cheat while competing against biological girls.
The fact that Franklin Pierce University has its first NCAA championship in women’s track shouldn’t be controversial.
In fact, the idea that a small, private college in New Hampshire could win a national championship when its women’s track program has been around for seven years seems pretty amazing.
What’s even more amazing is how thoroughly the athlete who won the national championship dominated the field:
“Senior CeCe Telfer (Lebanon, N.H.) took control of the 400-meter hurdles down the back stretch on Saturday night and went on to post victory by more than a second, in a personal collegiate-best time of 57.53 seconds,” a post on the college’s athletics page reads.
“Telfer also added All-America First Team accolades in the 100-meter hurdles earlier in the day, on the third and final day of the NCAA Championships, hosted by Texas A&M-Kingsville, at Javelina Stadium.”
The controversy arises in the fact that CeCe Telfer isn’t a female. In fact, Telfer was named “Craig” at birth, in a male body.
The male body, as is scientifically understood, is naturally faster and stronger than the female body. But don’t worry, SB Nation’s LGBT-themed OutSports website vouchsafes: Telfer “doesn’t win every time.”
“Bad news for those looking for proof that transgender women athletes are ‘destroying’ women’s athletics because of what they claim is their ‘inherent advantage’ over cisgender — non-trans — competitors,” a March 10 article read.
“They will surely be disappointed in the results from the NCAA Division II Indoor Track & Field Championships in Pittsburgh, Kan., Saturday. If anything, they will see that one young trans woman, CeCe Telfer, who’s been targeted by right-wing websites for ‘switching to female’ didn’t even crack the top five in any of her events.”
Stand Up To Government Corruption and Hypocrisy – usbacklash.org