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Female athletes sent burning messages to Nike amid the impulse of justice in women’s sports and the elimination of biological men who compete against them at different levels of competition.
An XX-XY athletics ad asked several athletes that if they could send a message to Nike, what would it be? Riley Gaines, Macey Boggs, Lauren Miller and Payton McNabb were among those that appear in the video.
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From left to right, Lauren Miller, Riley Gaines and Payton McNabb shoot a message to Nike. (Athletics XX-XY)
“If I had the opportunity to talk to Nike, I would tell them to do it,” said Gaines, the former star swimmer from the Kentucky Wildcats, he said in the clip. “That is your slogan, right, Nike? Just do it. When I say it, I mean the right thing. And that is to defend women and biological reality.”
Miller, a professional golfer who participated in the United States Women’s Open of 2022, asked the company to “think about her daughters.”
“If we let men and children continue to invade, women’s sports will be erased,” he said.
McNabb, who stayed with brain damage after being beaten on the face by a spike of a biological man during a high school volleyball match, said he had “dreams of practicing” sport at the university, but the incident underpinned them.
The high school girls claim that the track officials forced them to take off the ‘Protect Girls Sports’ shirts

Melissa Batie-Smoose appeared in the XX-XY athletics announcement. (Pak Gazette Channel)
“You are saying that you are supporting women, but in reality you are not doing anything,” said Boggs, a high school volleyball player. “You are using us when it is convenient, but in private, you are not doing anything about it.”
The former NCAA Kaitlynn Wheeler swimmer, the Canadian weightlifter April Hutchinson, the former Volleyball player of Nevada Wolf Pack Sia Liilii and the former assistant coach of the state of San José, Melissa Batie-Smoose, also spoke.
Nike did not immediately respond to the request for comments from Pak Gazette Digital.
The company has been under fire in recent weeks for accusations that it financed a study to investigate transgender young people and the issue of men competing in sports of girls and women. The first idea of the study appeared in an article in the New York Times.

People visit the Nike store in 5th Avenue during the holiday season in New York City on December 9, 2022. (Reuters/Eduardo Muñoz)
Nike told Outkick that the study was “never initialized” and “does not advance.”