Transgender athletics runner Sadie Schreiner has not participated in future events for the Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) women's track and field team amid the NCAA's gender eligibility policy change.
A RIT spokesman told Fox News Digital that the program complies with the NCAA's new policy, which reflects a recent executive order banning President Donald Trump's recent executive order from women's sports. .
“We are following the Trump administration's executive order, and we are following the NCAA participation policy for transgender student-athletes. Sadie is not participating in the next tournament,” the spokesman said.
For sports coverage on foxnews.com, click here
Sadie Schreiner will place the trans flag in her hair before winning the award at the NCAA DIII Outdoor Athletics Championships held in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina on May 25, 2024. (Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post byotty Images)
The NCAA officially changed its gender eligibility policy to ban all biological men from women's sports on February 6, the day after Trump signed the order.
“Student-athletes assigned males at birth may not compete in female teams,” the new policy reads.
However, the policy states that biological men can still practice on a female team and “receive benefits.”
“Student-athletes assigned at birth can practice on NCAA women's teams and receive all other perks applicable to student-athletes,” the policy reads.
RIT has not checked with Fox News Digital to see if Schreiner has been removed from the roster and has not practiced with the team. Schreiner still has a player profile page on the team's official website.
Schreiner was a controversial figure in women's track and field this year after appearing at the 2024 NCAA Division III Outdoor Athletics Championships in May.
So, Schreiner finished last at 400 meters, but still occupied a competitive spot that could have gone to biological women.
A teenage girl opened a trans athlete scandal and turned high school into a cultural war battlefield
Earlier that month, Schreiner competed in the Liberty League Championship, winning both the women's 200 and 400 meters, breaking the 400-meter record in the process. If the athlete had performed the same in the men's competition, Schreiner would have finished for more than two seconds last.
Recently, in late January, Schreiner boasted after winning an event with a female enemy.
“My spikes almost fell on the turn, not the race I was looking for this week. With a poor start to my time, I barely wanted my time,” RIT runner said on Instagram I wrote it in the post.
“The good news is that the season is just beginning and we're going to leave everything on the Nationals track,” Schreiner added in a transgender pride flag emoji.
Schreiner also emphasized his opposition to states and universities that were not offering full scholarships to trans athletes when Schreiner wanted to transfer in December. Athletes have condemned 25 state laws prohibiting trans athletes from competing with girls and women.
Click here to get the Fox News app

Sadie Schreiner will compete in the 400m race at the NCAA DIII Outdoor Athletics Championships held in Myrtle Beach on May 24, 2024. (Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post byotty Images)
“Of all the hurdles that usually have, it's a trance, so there's an extra layer and 50% of the country banned me from joining. Riding,” Schreiner said. .
“It has become clear that no matter how stubborn my coaches are, no matter how hard I am, and how I lead me to their team, college administrators usually stop me from making them available. ”
Currently, Schreiner will not be able to implement new NCAA policies to compete with women's university teams across the country.
However, Schreiners can compete in men's teams in accordance with the new policy.
“Suppose student-athletes are involved in NCAA men's sports (practices and competition) regardless of their assigned gender by birth or gender identity, and meet all other NCAA eligibility requirements.” Read the new policy.
Follow Fox News Digital's Sports Coverage on X and subscribe to Fox News Sports Huddle Newsletter.