Now that we’ve passed peak wokeness, perhaps we can start admitting that the evidence is undeniable that boys win at girls sporting events because of the massive advantages of biology.
Of course, the idea should be self-evident. It wasn’t, in some quarters, which is why we’re still having this discussion. And in very progressive Ann Arbor, Michigan, the idea that wokeness ever peaked is considered a minor heresy.
Thus you have Skyline High School making the state girls volleyball tournament for the second straight year — and in dominant fashion.
The secret to its success? The team isn’t precisely all girls.
According to sports outlet OutKick, Skyline won a straight-sets victory over Saline High School on Thursday, making Skyline one of eight teams left in the Division I Michigan High School Athletic Association girls tournament.
However, parents for the Saline team were incensed during the 25-15, 25-18, 25-21 sweep, thanks to the fact that a female-identifying male athlete was on the Skyline team.
The controversy isn’t just that the girls team has a boy on it, although that’s certainly part of the problem.
From OutKick reporter Dan Zaksheske:
The MHSAA requires transgender athletes to have an approved waiver to compete in any organization-sponsored events, which include the district and regional tournaments. The organization said in September that it had not granted any waivers since last fall (waivers have to be approved every year), but has ignored multiple follow-up requests asking if one has since been granted.
As OutKick has reported throughout the fall season, Skyline appears to have attempted to hide its biological male player’s identity, with many parents of opposing teams expressing outrage when they discovered their teenage girls were competing against a male.
The individual in question, Zaksheske wrote, “dominated the first set with several massive kills, helping Skyline cruise to the first set win.”
As Zaksheske’s report noted, this wasn’t met with unmixed delight by the parents of Saline athletes.
“As you saw, it was actually a pretty even match when he wasn’t on the court,” one parent said after the match.
“I’ve never seen a girl jump that high,” another remarked, presumably in sarcasm.
And another parent kept putting his thumbs down every time the male athlete made a play.
That didn’t stop Skyline’s march to the Elite Eight in the tournament, however.