• You must be logged in to see or use the Shoutbox. Besides, if you haven't registered, you really should. It's quick and it will make your life a little better. Trust me. So just register and make yourself at home with like-minded individuals who share either your morbid curiousity or sense of gallows humor.

Sugar Cookie

Veteran Member
Bold Member!


A female student hockey player has suffered horrific facial injuries after being struck by a shot from a male opponent.

Footage of the horror accident saw the woman collapse and scream in agony after the ball hit her face, with the male player's participation sparking backlash despite being allowed under Massachusetts law.

The incident occurred Thursday between two varsity teams at Swampscott High School and Dighton-Rehoboth Regional High School, with the former coming out on top thanks to two goals scored by the male player.
In an email after the incident, Dighton-Rehoboth Superintendent Bill Runey told alarmed parents that the injury to their student 'dramatically magnifies the concerns of many about player safety.'
Many viewers of the footage have reacted with fury at the male player's presence on the field, due to the unfair physical advantage he holds after going through puberty.

In the footage, a female player from Dighton-Rehoboth passed the ball to their male teammate, who controlled it before releasing a vicious shot.

The ball immediately struck an opponent across the face, leaving her with grisly facial injuries, including losing two teeth, that sent her to the hospital. Her condition is unclear.

Shocked teammates could be seen leaning their hands on their knees and comforting each other after witnessing the grisly injury.
Despite the harrowing scenes, the male player's place on the team was defended by Swampscott Public Schools Athletic Director Kelly Wolff, who said he has 'the exact same right to participate as any player on the team.'


Wolff identified the player, who is not believed to be transgender, as a 4-year varsity player and a co-captain of the team, according to WCVB.

The athletic director's stance that he is allowed to compete is correct under Massachusetts law, which has zero restrictions to preventing a male athlete from competing in female sports.
Amid the backlash, the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association (MIAA) issued a statement to explain the legal ground which allows males and females to play sport in alternatively-sexed teams.

'Massachusetts General Law was originally enacted to protect students from discrimination based on sex, and later expanded to protect students based on gender identification,' the MIAA statement read.

'As a result of this law, and consistent with the interpretive guidance offered by the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education, athletic opportunities must be afforded to students in accordance with their identified gender, not necessarily their birth-assigned gender.'
In response, Runey said the law is clear but overlooks the potential for decreased player safety by allowing male players to compete against females.


'For any male athlete that's participating in a female sport, there are zero restrictions,' he said.

'So, I'm looking for the MIAA to facilitate some conversations to have some middle ground in terms of player safety.'

Continue reading at link

While I know it is unfair to ask I wish females would refuse to play against teams that have male players on them.

The parents of the injured players should sue the parents of the male player.
 









Continue reading at link

While I know it is unfair to ask I wish females would refuse to play against teams that have male players on them.

The parents of the injured players should sue the parents of the male player.

Refuse to play and lose that scholarship?
Rub a little dirt in it and press on!
 
Dental injuries are FREQUENT in women/girl's field hockey.
Everyone's supposed to wear mouthguards.

"Her condition is unclear." :rolleyes:

Is she conscious? Are her vital signs stable?
Then it's safe to say she's in GOOD condition.

"... who is not believed to be transgender" :rolleyes:

Is that what journalists do now?

"Tom Hanks, who is not believed to be transgender, was in New Orleans Friday to serve as the keynote speaker at the opening ceremony for the National World War II Museum’s third and final expansion.". ??

He was in Bosum Buddies, wasn't he?
*********


Females boycotting field hockey won't have any effect.
It's not considered important, and the onus shouldn't be on females to sacrifice something to change what men do.

Having said that, there's no WAY any guy at my high school would have wanted to play girl's field hockey then face his male classmates.
There are laws and rules against doing and saying some things, but there is nothing that says a male player on a females team, you know, "who is not believed to be transgender", can't be shunned.

Ostracism is considered to be a form of bullying, but I think it's a valuable tool to self regulate society.
Only about the things I don't like, of course. :penguin::rolleyes:
(I actually mean that of course, but it's ridiculous.)


There's no law that says people can't silently pass gas then say "Do I smell popcorn?" causing everyone to take a deep nose inhale, but in general, they don't.
It's not acceptable among their peers.

Almost everyone feels sports should be an exception to the gender debate.

The girls baseball team doesn't play the rival boys baseball team?
THAT would really illustrate the preposterousness.


But Riley Gaines? Stay in your swim lane. Without mouthguards, field hockey players get their teeth bashed out. ( It's hockey!! )
Advocate for compulsory mouthguards if you care about females in sports.
 
Until all girls stand together this won’t stop. And it should.

I can’t imagine getting my teeth knocked out by a man. In a game!

I do but I don’t feel sorry for them. They have to STOP acting like they’re ok with it.
[automerge]1699188702[/automerge]
I think you might be saying this wrong in your title. It’s not a T female that got her teeth knocked out. It’s a girl.
[automerge]1699188994[/automerge]
I had 4 boys. I taught them NOT to hit girls. My son was mortified when there was a girl in his wrestling class. I said just pin her and get it over with. He did. How can you do that to a boy??? It’s not normal.
[automerge]1699189237[/automerge]









Continue reading at link

While I know it is unfair to ask I wish females would refuse to play against teams that have male players on them.

The parents of the injured players should sue the parents of the male player.

It is NOT unfair to say girls & boys should not compete against each other
[automerge]1699191314[/automerge]
I just scrolled through all new posts and 49 were from the same person. It’s getting dumb
 
Last edited:
Is E sports supposed to be men’s sports? Then yes that’s true. Until girls decide they’re done getting their butt kicked by boys… this won’t stop.
Actually, multiple reasons for men’s sports to attract larger audiences, males pretending to be female competitors is not one of them. Not trying to offend female athletes but It’s that men competition is at a higher physical level of athleticism. having heavier developed bone and muscle mass, men physically excel over women in sports
Males claiming to be female, allowed in female competitions is the latest woke mental disorder
 
Apparently, the offender is not even a "trans woman" and is instead a male who cannot play at the same level with other males. As in, there's no male league in his locale.

But why can't he just pursue another sport which has enough male peers in his area to have such a league? So, the line goes from "trans women who are born men can play in women's leagues", now to "men without such dysphoria can play in women's leagues if an equivalent men's league isn't available".

They are women's leagues, not "women's leagues, but men can play in them too if they feel like".

This is the bed that modern gender ideology made for itself. Regardless of any other variables, there is no legitimate reason for a male to play in a women's league. The guy with the #2 jersey does not belong here, full stop. Do one or more female athletes have to die for this to make sense to the people pushing this?

One thing to point out is that usually I'm super supportive of men with long hair (as I am one myself); but with him being long-haired in this context, he blends in with the other women and can contextually be mistaken for one, by no fault of the perceiver. I find his ability to at least superficially blend in to be disingenuous and insidious.

This field hockey league should be held accountable in the court system for letting a man play in their ranks, because the above injurious incident would not have happened without such; I hope they end up paying a substantial sum to the injured woman and her family. The male player should be criminally charged, and not given a "sports exception", because this injury is heinous and gruesome. Will all this happen? That's another question altogether.

As for the injured female player, she has a long road ahead of her to heal. She won't be playing a favorite sport of hers at present because a man has taken that away from her. Even after she heals, she may be self-conscious of her smile, or any facial expression revealing her teeth, for a long time.
 
newspress-collage-1dh1fn8r2-1699555910861.jpg

Tensions are high in a Massachusetts school district where a high school female field hockey player suffered “significant facial and dental injuries” after being hit in the face on a shot from a male opponent, an official said Wednesday.

Bill Runey, the Dighton-Rehoboth superintendent of schools, appeared on “OutKick The Morning” with Charly Arnolt and described outrage in the district.

“It’s very hot. The tension is very high,” Runey said. “At first, it was a sense of trauma. I went to meet the bus when the girls returned from Swampscott because I wanted to let them know that they had the support of the district.

“That we were gonna have resources available to them the next school day with our counseling staff. And the trauma that I saw in their eyes, the sadness I saw in their eyes and in the eyes of the coaches is something that I will never, ever forget.

“And now, it has turned to an outrage because of the fact that it doesn’t seem as if anybody is willing to listen to change.”

Runey’s remarks came after Dighton-Rehoboth field hockey captain Kelsey Bain wrote a letter to the Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association (MIAA) urging it to make a change to its rules. She wrote that the “MIAA needs to do better.”

Bain cited an article from the New Boston Post that said there were 41 boys who played on girls field hockey teams during the 2019-20 school year. Bain suggested the MIAA create a new league.

“There is likely more interest, but the stigma of boys playing on a girl’s team is probably a deterrent,” Bain wrote. “I am sure school districts can institute co-op teams to create further opportunities for males to play in their own division, which I assume you are already aware of because, under rule 34 of the MIAA handbook, there is a division for boys’ field hockey listed under the Fall Sports category.

“You have a chance to change the negative publicity the MIAA has been receiving due to the incident that happened on Thursday night by moving forward with the proposal for a seven versus seven boys league.”

Bain recalled the horror she and her teammates felt when they witnessed the incident.
“The shrieks and screams of fear and pain that projected from her after being hit filled the stadium,” Bain wrote.

The looks of horror and shock on the faces of the girls surrounding her were also chilling.

“Following the injury, my teammates were sobbing not only in fear for their teammate but also in fear that they had to go back out onto the field and continue a game, playing against a male athlete who hospitalized one of our own. The traumatic event sheds light on the rules and regulations of male athletes participating in women’s sports.”

The MIAA cites the Massachusetts Equal Rights Amendment, adopted in 1976, which was extended to scholastic sports three years later.

The MIAA said it “understands” safety concerns but inclusion has trumped that safety.

“We respect and understand the complexity and concerns that exist regarding student safety. However, student safety has not been a successful defense to excluding students of one gender from participating on teams of the opposite gender,” the MIAA said in a statement. “The arguments generally fail due to the lack of correlation between injuries and mixed-gender teams.”

In response to the MIAA’s statement, Bain wrote that the “causation is not addressed.”

“We all witnessed the substantial damage that a male has the ability to cause against a female during a game,” Bain wrote. “How much longer does the MIAA plan on using girls as statistical data points before they realize that boys do not belong in girls’ sports? Twenty injuries? One hundred? Death?”

Full Article:
 
Back
Top