(Krona) – San Jose, who was arrested in the middle of a hot national debate, spoke about the sexual athletes for the first time this week.
in Interview with the New York TimesBlair Fleming described what it was to move when he was a teenager, and he talked about how the SJSU team broke out for women’s volleyball in 2024.
When Fellang reached SJSU, playing the girl or sports team was not a new thing for her. According to the New York Times, Fleming learned about the identity of the transgender when she was in the eighth grade. She said: “It was a lamp’s moment.
The Times wrote, “At the age of fourteen, with the support of her mother and her husband her husband, she worked with a therapist and doctor and began to move socially and insect.
At the volleyball stadium last season, Vleing flourished in the role of 6’1 from San Jose State University.
Outside the stadium, the captain of the austere team joined a lawsuit with former college athletes, Riley Jeans, asking NCAA officials to remove Fellang from the team.
Captain Brock Sloor claimed that her ninth title has been violated by officials who allowed a “biological male” to play on the volleyball of women. Several teams chose to lose their matches against Spartans after the news of the transgender player has released the headlines.

The New York Times wrote: “This season affected all the players and coaches of San Jose, but Fellang told me that it was not loaded with her. After Sloser joined the Guinnis suit, Felling found herself freezing her other team members.”
Fleming Times told her that she “felt suicide”, and it was “the darkest time in my life.”
The last two matches were held in Spartans in the 2024 season during the Mountain West November championship. Boise State chose to lose their game to SJSU before defeating the state of Colorado Spartans 3-1. SJSU ended the season with 14-7.

Three months later, Jeans stood by President Donald Trump while signing an executive order aimed at banning sexually transformed athletes to compete for the sports teams for girls and women. The matter stated that educational institutions and sports associations may not ignore “basic biological facts between the sexes.” NCAA replied by banning all transit athletes.

The New York Times wrote, “Even before NCAA abolished the policy of transgender people in the wake of Trump’s executive order,” men are removed from women’s sport, the era of transit women participating in the first section has ended.
Flence and Slusser are both in their first year in college. Currently, there is no player on the campus in San Jose.
Sloor Times told her that she complements her final on the Internet online from her home in Texas. “I felt that people were like staring at me, I felt that I had to see my back whenever I was on campus,” she told Fox News.
Fleming returned to her home in Virginia and ended her public relations testimony through SJSU classes online, according to the Times.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.