At the CIF Southern Section Finals, Crean Lutheranâs Reese Hogan refused second place, standing atop the empty first-place podium in protest of competing against trans athlete AB Hernandez. The viral moment has reignited the fierce U.S. debate on fairness, inclusion, and womenâs sports
High School Podium Protest Sparks Nationwide Outrage
At the CIF Southern Section Finals on May 18, Crean Lutheran senior Reese Hogan did the unthinkableâshe climbed onto the first-place podium in the triple jump, even though she placed second.
Why? The winner, AB Hernandez, is a transgender athlete born male but now competing in the female division. Hoganâs silent standâcaptured in viral videoâhas once again ignited Americaâs fiery debate over the participation of transgender athletes in womenâs sports.
The Viral Moment
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Hernandez won the triple jump with a leap of 41 ft 4 in, outdistancing Hogan by over four feet
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As Hernandez left the podium, Hogan quietly stepped onto the now-empty gold-medal spotâher way of protesting what she and many others view as an unfair playing field.
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A Nation Divided
Supporters of transgender inclusion call it a matter of identity and human rights. Critics argue it threatens fairness and safety in womenâs competition.
Former President Trump signed an executive order banning transgender women from female sports, declaring:
âThe war on womenâs sports is over
Maine and other states have refused to enact such bans, reflecting deep regional divisions
Online Reactions
Womenâs sports advocate Jennifer Sey:
âThis guy won the girls triple jump by 8 ft. Heâs really crushing it!â
Critics:
âSecond place is the real champion! Good on herâthis nonsense must stop.â
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A blunt homemade sign at the meet read:
âThe weakest men compete with girls, the weakest minds celebrate it.â
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Past Incidents Fuel the Fire
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In 2022, volleyball player Payton McNabb suffered a serious injury after colliding with a transgender opponentâprompting North Carolina to pass a statewide ban.
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More than 400 Olympic athletes later urged the NCAA to keep its doors open, arguing that sport should remain âfor all.â
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Hernandez Speaks Out.
Hernandez told Capital & Main:
âI followed all the rules⌠Trans girls are girls.â
They pointed to studies showing transgender women do not consistently outperform cisgender peers, and in some metrics, may even be disadvantaged.
Whatâs Next?
With state laws, federal orders, and high-school protests colliding, the future of womenâs sports remains uncertain. Hoganâs podium protest may be a local moment, but the national fight over fairness versus inclusion shows no sign of slowing down.