This young athlete has something honest to say to those throwing hate her way
Warning: This story includes topics about discrimination against transgender people, which may be upsetting for some readers.
A transgender student-athlete who recently won a school track event has responded directly to the wave of criticism she’s been facing.
Hernandez, who is 16 years old and a member of the track team at Jurupa Valley High School in Southern California, secured the top spot in the triple jump. She earned a gold medal with a final distance of 42 feet 2 inches. She shared the first-place title with Kira Grant Hatcher, whose best jump was 40 feet 5 inches.
Before the competition took place, the California Interscholastic Federation made an important rule change. They decided that if any athlete lost to a transgender competitor, it wouldn’t impact their own ranking. This meant Hernandez’s participation wouldn’t take away placements or achievements from other girls in the competition.

Now, as a junior in high school, Hernandez has decided to speak out, offering a direct and clear message to the people who’ve been criticizing her.
“It’s just weird at this point,” Hernandez said. While there were groups of people standing outside the gates to protest, she pointed out that inside the stadium, the atmosphere felt much more supportive and positive.

During the varsity high jump final, Hernandez once again shared the spotlight. She tied with two other athletes—Jillene Wetteland and Lelanie Laruelle. Because of the new California policy, they all stood together on the podium as equals in the competition.
Using his platform on Truth Social, Trump posted: “California, under the leadership of Radical Left Democrat Gavin Newscum [sic], continues to ILLEGALLY allow ‘MEN TO PLAY IN WOMEN’S SPORTS.’”

The President issued an order demanding that federal funding for California be “held back, maybe permanently” unless the state complied with his executive directive from February aimed at protecting women’s sports.
Earlier this year, he also clashed with Maine’s governor, Janet Mills, in a tense exchange over the issue. Trump claimed that the state was in violation of Title IX, a law that bans sex-based discrimination in education.
He warned that schools could lose out on about $250 million in federal funding, although the White House eventually released the funds following a legal dispute over the matter.