Transgender Man With Mustache Competing Against Girls Proud Of Cheating Way to State Championship

Andraya Yearwood, a man with a mustache, who claims to be a transgender girl, is apparently pretty proud of himself for cheating his way to the women’s state championship in track & field for Stonington High School.

Transgender Man With Mustache Competing Against Girls Proud Of Cheating Way to State Championship

Transgender Man With Mustache Competing Against Girls Proud Of Cheating Way to State Championship

Yea, that takes a lot of talent.. a man cheating real girls out of their glory by competing against much smaller girls with half the muscles and power.

Andraya Yearwood, and any other male, should not be allowed to compete against girls just because the male has a mental problem that makes them think they are female. They are not female, no matter what they do or say, and they should be ashamed that they are gaining an upper hand on all of the real girls they will compete against.

Andraya Yearwood was probably just sick of being beaten by other boys, and decided that he could have more success if his track & field competition was not as tough, so why not claim to be a transgender girl so he can cheat against the girls? Loser!

Last year, Kate Hall wasn’t positive she fully appreciated winning a Class M state championship as a sophomore.

That gave Hall, a Stonington High School junior, even higher expectations for Tuesday’s Class M state track and field championship at Willow Brook Park, where she was focused on a repeat in the 100 meters and was also one of the top seeds in the 200, in which she finished in the top 10 in New England last year.

Instead, the day belonged to Cromwell’s Andraya Yearwood, a freshman who won both the 100 and the 200.

Yearwood is a transgender athlete who competed for Cromwell as a girl for the first time on April 5, winning both sprints in a tri-meet against Portland and Old Saybrook. The Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference “defers to the determination of the student and his or her local school regarding gender identification,” according to a Hartford Courant story about Yearwood earlier in the year.

“It feels really good. I’m really happy to win both titles,” Yearwood said after her performance in the Class M meet. “I kind of expected it. I’ve always gotten first, so I expected it to some extent. … I’m really proud of it.”

Yearwood won the 100 in 12.66 seconds, edging Hall, who was second in 12.83. Yearwood was then first in the 200 in 26.08. Woodland’s Erika Michie was second in 26.38 and Hall, the Eastern Connecticut Conference champion in the event, third in 26.65.

Hall had the top preliminary time in the 100 in 12.85 to Yearwood’s 12.89.

Hall admits to being competitive. That was the primary reason for the tears she wiped away Tuesday. Losing to anyone isn’t her favorite thing. She called the situation “frustrating.”

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