He United States Department of Education The NCAA is already asking the National Federation of Secondary School Associations (NFHS) that stripped the “bad appropriate” records and transgender athletes that compete in women’s women and sports less than a week after President Donald Trump signed a Executive order that prohibited them effectively. of the competition.
The statement follows a letter sent by the General Advisory Office of the United States Department of Education (OGC) for The NCAA And the NFHS urges the organization on Tuesday to “restore female athletes, records, titles, awards and recognitions embezzled by biological men competing in female categories.”
The president of the NCAA, Charlie Baker, offers a television interview during the game between the UCLA Bruins and the South Carolina Gamecocks in the Sweet 16 Round of the NCAA Women’s Basketball Tournament at Bon Seurs Wellness Arena on March 25 of 2023 in Greenville, South Carolina. (Maddie Meyer/Getty images)
The statement made organizations that stripped any praise of those athletes who “unfairly competed against girls and women in athletics,” and added that doing so would align the groups with the new policy.
CLICK HERE for more sports coverage at Foxnews.com
Trump signed the “Keep men out of female sports” Order on Wednesday, which will require entities that receive federal funds to align with title IX, which the Trump administration changed last week to recognize protections on the basis of biological sex, undoing the rewriting of former President Joe Biden 2024.
Surrounded by female athletes, Trump declared at the signature ceremony that “the war against women’s sports is over.”
In response to the executive order, President of the NCAA Charlie Baker Later he issued a statement indicating that the Board of Governors will review the Executive Order and take measures to align the organization’s policy in the next few days.

A general view of the NCAA pool flags. (Photos of Scott Taetsch/NCAA through Getty Images)
California residents protest, threaten the demands for the state’s refusal to follow the prohibition of TRump’s athletes
“We firmly believe that clear, consistent and uniform eligibility standards would better serve today’s athlete students instead of a mosaic of state laws and conflicting judicial decisions. For that purpose, the order of President Trump provides a clear standard,” Read in the statement.
“The Board of Governors of the NCAA is reviewing the Executive Order and will take the necessary measures to align the NCAA’s policy in the next few days, subject to more orientation of the administration. The association will continue to help foster welcoming environments on the campus for campus for All athletes.
The next day, the NCAA officially updated its gender eligibility policy that “limits competition in women’s sports to students assigned only to birth.”

The swimmer of the University of Pennsylvania, Lia Thomas, and the swimmer of Kentucky, Riley Gaines, react after finishing tied in the fifth place in the 200 free style finals in the NCAA swimming and diving championship on the NCAA on March 18 of 2022 at the Mcauley Aquatic Center in Atlanta Georgia. (Rich von Biberstein/Icon Sportswire through Getty Images)
Candice Jackson, attached general lawyer, said in a statement on Tuesday that NCAA’s decision to change her policy was only the first step.
“The next necessary step is to restore athletic records to women who for years have been devalued, ignored and forced to see men steal their praise. The Trump Department of Education will make all achievements of past, current and future university athletes,” .
The Executive Order has gathered with recoil.
The California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) said it will continue following the State’s Law that allows athletes to participate as any gender they identify, a spokesman for Pak Gazette Digital told Fox last week.
The last supplication of the Department of Education is also expected to meet similar rejections.