The transgender athletics broker, Sadie Schreiner, is not competing in future events for the Women’s Athletics Team of the Rochester Technology Institute (RIT) in the middle of the NCAA that changes its gender eligibility policy.
A Rit spokesman told Pak Gazette Digital that the program is complying with the new NCAA policy that reflects the recent executive order of President Donald Trump that prohibits trans athletes from women’s sports.
“We continue to follow the NCAA participation policy for students Transgender athletes after the executive order of the Trump administration. Sadie does not participate in the next meeting,” said the spokesman.
CLICK HERE for more sports coverage at Foxnews.com
Sadie Schreiner puts a transgender flag in her hair before heading to the awards in the Outdoor Athletics Championship of the NCAA DIII on May 25, 2024, in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. (Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post through Getty Images)
The NCAA officially changed its gender eligibility policies to prohibit all biological males of women’s sports on February 6, a day after Trump signed the order.
“An athlete student assigned to a man at birth may not compete in a team of women,” says the new policy.
However, politics also establishes that a biological man can still practice in a team of women and “receive benefits.”
“A student athlete assigned to birth can practice in a team of women in the NCAA and receive all other benefits applicable to athletes,” says politics.
Rit has not confirmed Pak Gazette Digital if Schreiner has been eliminated from the list and is no longer practicing with the team. Schreiner still has a player profile page on the official website of the team.
Schreiner has been a controversial figure in female athletics this year after an appearance in the outdoor athletics championship of Division III of the NCAA of 2024 in May.
There, Schreiner finished the last one in the 400 meters, but still took a place in the competition that could have gone to a biological woman.
The teenage girls open in the trans athlete scandal that turned their secondary school into a cultural warfall field
At the beginning of that month, Schreiner competed in the Championship of the League of Liberty and won both the female 200 and 400 meters, breaking the 400 meter record in the process. Schreiner would have ended last in more than two seconds if the athlete had the same performance in male competition.
Recently, at the end of January, Schreiner boasted after winning an event against female opponents.
“It is not the race I was looking for in this week, my peaks almost fell into the turn and with a bad start, my time was almost what I wanted,” wrote the Runner rit in an Instagram post.
“The good news is that the season has just begun, and I will leave everything on the track of the nationals,” Schreiner added with a transgender pride flag emoji.
Schreiner also set out to speak against the states and universities that did not offer the trans athlete a complete scholarship when Schreiner wanted to transfer, in December. The athlete blamed the laws into 25 states that prohibit Trans athletes with girls and women.

Sadie Schreiner runs to qualify for the 400M race in the outdoor athletics championships of the NCAA DIII on May 24, 2024 in Myrtle Beach. (Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post through Getty Images)
“Among all the transfers of obstacles they usually have, there is an additional layer because it is trans, 50% of the country forbade me Schreiner said.
“It was also clear that the states that did it, regardless of how inflexible the coaches were to have me in their teams, the university administrations would generally prevent them from allowing them to participate.”
Now, Schreiner will probably not be able to compete in any university team of women throughout the country with the new NCAA policy.
However, Schreiner could compete in a male team, according to the new policy.
“Regardless of the sex assigned to birth or gender identity, a student-attach can participate (practice and competition) in the NCAA male sports, assuming that they meet all other eligibility requirements of the NCAA,” says the new policy.