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WNBA player Brianna Turner faced social media backlash after she wrote an op-ed expressing her displeasure with the International Olympic Committee’s (IOC) policy to keep men out of women’s sports.
Turner, who recently signed a contract with the Las Vegas Aces after playing professionally in Australia, wrote in USA Today that she didn’t believe the new policy the IOC implemented actually protected the women’s sporting events.
The IOC said it would use genetic testing to ensure that women’s events only feature females. Turner accused the IOC of using the new policies to “scapegoat” transgender athletes while ignoring “real” issues regarding women in sports.
“Policies that single out transgender women and athletes with intersex variations do not protect women’s sports. They manufacture a scapegoat while the real challenges to women’s sports go unaddressed: unequal funding, limited access to training and facilities, pay disparities, male-dominated leadership, gender-based violence and harassment across race, sex, sexual orientation and gender identity,” Turner wrote on Friday.
She also denied the IOC’s argument that the new policy is being enacted to make sure that female sports are safe and fair, claiming there were no biological advantages in transgender athletes.
WNBA PLAYER OPPOSES NEW OLYMPICS TRANSGENDER POLICY, SAYING THEY DO ‘ANYTHING BUT’ PROTECT WOMEN

“In more than 15 years of organized basketball, I’ve played with and against people who are transgender and undoubtedly people with intersex variations, and I’ve never experienced any unfair advantages. I saw these players as my fellow athletes, not my enemies,” Turner wrote.
She concluded by demanding that the IOC do not use women athletes in efforts to “shame or exclude” transgender athletes.
Turner received a torrent of social media responses to her critique of the IOC.
Turner’s op-ed followed similar response from former U.S. women’s soccer star Megan Rapinoe and Basketball Hall of Fame inductee Sue Bird.
“We already know that biology, as much as we want it to be just nice and clean and tight and perfectly in one category and another, it’s not,” Rapinoe said earlier this month. “We know that. So, now what we’re doing is subjecting everybody, all women and all people who are identifying as women to this really invasive testing that only to me says like, ‘Oh we’re just trying to whittle it down to a certain type of woman.’ Is that what we’re doing? That’s really the whole game here.”
Bird said the IOC policy was akin to “fearmongering.”
Turner is set to play with the Aces this season. She was with the Indiana Fever in 2025 and the Chicago Sky in 2024 after spending the first five seasons of her career with the Phoenix Mercury.

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There are no known transgender athletes competing in the WNBA.
Fox News’ Lindsay Kornick contributed to this report.
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