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Martina Navratilova says Billie Jean King’s trans-athlete stance ‘doesn’t square’ with her own words

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Martina Navratilova wants Billie Jean King to explain herself.

King is one of the most important figures in the history of women’s sports, a tennis icon who helped build the modern women’s game and spent decades fighting for equal opportunity, equal pay and respect for female athletes.

But King has also publicly supported trans-identifying biological male athletes competing in girls’ and women’s sports.

In a 2025 interview with The Telegraph ahead of Wimbledon, King called the broader transgender-athlete debate in sports “a nightmare” and said people should listen to transgender people’s stories and make them feel included.

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That position has frustrated Navratilova, another tennis legend and longtime advocate of gay rights and women’s sports, because King has also publicly acknowledged the physical differences between men and women.

Asked how King could reconcile those two positions, Navratilova said the contradiction is obvious.

“I honestly don’t know because it doesn’t square,” Navratilova told OutKick.

Navratilova was responding to a clip of King discussing the obvious physical differences between men and women. In the clip, King said men are generally bigger and stronger, have different skeletal systems and bigger hearts, and that women never claimed they were physically the same as men.

That’s the entire reason women’s sports exist in the first place.

In 2020, King joined nearly 200 athletes in supporting a friend-of-the-court brief against an Idaho law that barred trans-identifying male athletes from competing in girls’ and women’s sports.

“There is no place in any sport for discrimination of any kind,” King said at the time. “I’m proud to support all transgender athletes who simply want the access and opportunity to compete in the sport they love.”

That’s the gap Navratilova is pressing.

“I think she thinks that they play fair and square, meaning males identify as women, take all the hormones and do everything, like Renée Richards did 50 years ago,” Navratilova said. “And that it’s just nice to include everybody.”

But Navratilova said the issue can’t be reduced to kindness or inclusion.

TENNIS STAR ARYNA SABALENKA SAYS FEMALE ATHLETES FACING TRANS COMPETITORS ‘JUST NOT FAIR TO WOMEN’

She offered a hypothetical scenario: a high school boys basketball team holds tryouts, 10 boys make the team, and five boys who don’t make the boys team then try out for the girls team. If they make it, which they almost certainly would, five girls lose their spots.

“That’s not equality,” Navratilova said. “That’s a total takeover.”

And it’s not just about who wins, she said. It’s about roster spots, podium spots, awards, prize money, privacy, safety and the entire purpose of female-only categories.

For Navratilova, the answer starts with keeping sex-based boundaries intact.

“The solution is obvious,” she told OutKick. “No male bodies in women’s sports and no male bodies in women’s sex-based spaces for many different reasons, not the least of which is women’s rights to safety, dignity and fairness and privacy.”

Navratilova said her private conversations with King have made King’s public position even more frustrating.

“Billie Jean has repeatedly told me over the last four or five years that she would love to talk to me about it, that she defers to me because I know a lot more about it than she does,” Navratilova said.

But Navratilova said the conversations she expected, never really happened.

“Without talking to me really and listening to what my points were, she just went her way and put out the statement by her and the Women’s Sports Foundation about inclusion and all this stuff,” Navratilova said.

That, Navratilova said, is what surprised her most.

“I don’t think she really has heard the other side of the debate, so to speak,” Navratilova said.

Navratilova said she wants King to answer the question directly.

“Please get Billie Jean on record,” Navratilova said. “I’d like to know how she explains it because she hasn’t been able to explain it to me.”

OutKick contacted King and the Women’s Sports Foundation seeking comment and offering King an interview. Neither responded.

And Navratilova is not alone.

Nancy Hogshead, a three-time Olympic gold medalist swimmer, civil rights lawyer and former Women’s Sports Foundation president, went even further.

Asked whether King’s comments on male advantages suggested she was starting to come around, Hogshead rejected that premise.

“Oh no, she’s always known that,” Hogshead told OutKick. “She’s a hypocrite, she’s a total hypocrite.”

Hogshead said she could understand confusion several years ago, before more research and high-profile cases brought the issue to the forefront.

Her own view, Hogshead said, was not always what it is now.

“I was in favor of it too,” Hogshead said. “I thought this was about inclusion and nondiscrimination. I thought it was fair.”

That has changed.

“I was wrong,” Hogshead said. “I was dead wrong.”

Hogshead pointed to sex-eligibility disputes involving Caster Semenya, the Lia Thomas case and research on male puberty and athletic performance as part of what caused her to rethink her position.

She said the same evidence should matter for King.

“She knows, but she hasn’t made the connection,” Hogshead said. “As she says, men are faster, stronger, bigger lungs structurally, but hasn’t made the connection of like, oh, so that’s unfair to the girls to have to compete with that.”

Hogshead said her frustration with King and the Women’s Sports Foundation predates the transgender-athlete debate.

“I wouldn’t say I left,” Hogshead said of her 2014 departure from WSF. “I would say I got fired because I would not sign a contract.”

Hogshead alleged the contract would have restricted her from speaking publicly about sexual abuse and harassment involving athletes.

Asked why she believed a women’s sports organization would want to limit her ability to speak on that issue, Hogshead pointed to what she described as King’s aversion to backlash.

“Because Billie Jean didn’t want to go into any room and face hostility or having somebody be against her,” Hogshead said.

Hogshead connected that episode to the current fight over transgender athletes in women’s sports.

“I think it’s more political for the same reason, for the exact same reason that she didn’t wanna be involved in the sexual abuse issue or she didn’t want the Women’s Sports Foundation to be involved,” Hogshead said. “It’s hard to be the tip of the spear.”

To Hogshead, both fights come back to the same issue: whether women’s sports leaders are willing to take unpopular stands when women and girls need defending.

OutKick separately asked the Women’s Sports Foundation whether Hogshead’s role ended because she refused to sign a contract restricting her from speaking publicly about sexual abuse in sports and whether King was involved in or aware of that contract decision. WSF did not respond before publication.

That leaves a central question unanswered.

If men have physical advantages over women, and King says they do, then why should biological males who identify as women be allowed into female categories?

Navratilova’s position is especially notable because she has personal history with Renée Richards, the transgender tennis player who sued to compete in the women’s draw at the 1977 U.S. Open.

Richards later coached Navratilova.

That history matters because Navratilova didn’t come to the issue as an opponent of inclusion.

“Because of Renée, I was completely all-in for inclusion,” Navratilova said. “Most of us welcomed Renée into the fold.”

CHRIS EVERT DEFENDS MARTINA NAVRATILOVA ON TRANS ATHLETES: ‘SCIENCE DOESN’T LIE’

But Navratilova said Richards competed at a very different moment and under very different circumstances.

Richards was 43 and not in peak playing shape when competing against women, Navratilova said. At the time, Richards was essentially a one-off case.

“It was only one because she won the right to compete in a court of law,” Navratilova said. “There were no others. Even if there were other transgender people, they would have to sue for the right to compete.”

That has changed.

In recent years, trans-identifying biological male athletes have competed in women’s and girls’ sports across the country, from high school track and field to college and junior college volleyball to cycling, swimming and other sports.

Navratilova said the change forced her to reconsider the issue in a way she did not have to when Richards was the only example. But, more importantly, Richards also has a new perspective on the issue.

“Renée herself now says she should not have been able to compete,” Navratilova said. “She realizes now she had an advantage.”

Richards made a similar argument in a 2024 position paper published by Sports Illustrated in 2025. “I believe that having gone through male puberty disqualifies transgender women from the female category in sports,” Richards wrote, adding that a “retained physical advantage persists” even after testosterone reduction

That’s why Navratilova says it’s no longer enough to rely on the language of inclusion without answering the competitive question.

“Boys are faster, stronger, quicker than girls,” Navratilova said. “And so, if it doesn’t matter who wins, why do they have to compete as a girl? If they feel like a girl, they can still compete with the boys if they don’t care where they end up. Why is it the girls that need to suck it up?”

Navratilova came out publicly as a lesbian in 1981 and became one of the most prominent openly gay athletes in the world.

That’s part of what makes the backlash against her so striking.

Navratilova has been called homophobic, transphobic, bigoted and worse for her position on women’s sports. She told OutKick the attacks are especially frustrating because many of the people attacking her don’t know what it was like for gay athletes when she came out.

Asked what she makes of being called homophobic, Navratilova dismissed the idea.

“It’s just stupid,” Navratilova said. “I came out before they were born, so they don’t know what it was like.”

Navratilova said the criticism from within the LGBTQ advocacy world has been painful because she still believes in equal rights.

“I respect everybody’s right to human rights, equal rights everywhere,” Navratilova said.

But she said equal rights do not include the right for male-bodied athletes to enter female sports or female-only spaces.

“You do not have a right to come into my space,” Navratilova said.

That doesn’t mean the verbal attacks haven’t stung.

“What does it make me feel like? Just sad,” Navratilova said. “Just really sad that they would just name-call rather than have a discussion and totally discount what I went through and twist it around.”

King’s legacy in women’s sports is undeniable.

She fought for women to have opportunities, respect, prize money and a professional tour of their own. She famously beat Bobby Riggs in the “Battle of the Sexes,” a moment that became larger than tennis and helped cement King as a symbol of women’s equality.

But that history is exactly why Navratilova and Hogshead say King’s current position deserves scrutiny.

Women’s sports were not created because women lacked talent, discipline or courage. They were created because biological sex matters in athletics.

King knows that. She has said so herself.

That’s why Navratilova wants an answer.

How does King square a lifetime spent fighting for women’s sports with a position that allows biological males to compete against females?

So far, King hasn’t answered that question for OutKick. And according to Navratilova, she hasn’t answered it for her, either.

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Star Disney Actress Dead At Just 35 Years Old

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Star Disney Actress Dead At Just 35 Years Old

Hollywood is mourning the loss of former child star Daveigh Chase, whose memorable performances in some of the most iconic films of the early 2000s left a lasting impression on an entire generation of moviegoers.

Chase, best known for voicing Lilo in Disney’s beloved animated classic *Lilo & Stitch* and portraying the terrifying Samara Morgan in the horror blockbuster *The Ring*, died Tuesday at the age of 35 following a sudden health battle. According to reports, Chase suffered from meningitis and a severe blood infection that led to septic complications and ultimately caused multiple organ failure. She had reportedly been hospitalized in Los Angeles earlier this month after struggling with malnutrition.

The actress rose to fame at an incredibly young age and quickly became one of the most recognizable child performers of her generation.

In 2002, Chase landed the role that would make her a household name when she voiced Lilo Pelekai in Disney’s *Lilo & Stitch*. The film became a major box-office success and remains one of Disney’s most beloved animated features more than two decades later. Chase later reprised the role for the franchise’s television series, helping introduce the character to an entirely new audience.

That same year, Chase showcased her remarkable range by delivering one of the most memorable performances in modern horror cinema.

As Samara Morgan in *The Ring*, Chase terrified audiences around the world with her chilling portrayal of the mysterious young girl at the center of the film’s supernatural curse. Her performance became an instant cultural phenomenon and earned her the MTV Movie Award for Best Villain. Even today, many horror fans consider Samara one of the most iconic horror characters of the 21st century.

Beyond those breakout roles, Chase built an impressive résumé that extended across both film and television.

She voiced Chihiro Ogino in the English-language version of the Academy Award-winning animated masterpiece *Spirited Away*, another project that remains beloved by fans worldwide. She also appeared in films such as *Donnie Darko* and *Beethoven’s 5th*, while earning television roles on popular programs including *Sabrina the Teenage Witch*, *ER*, *Charmed*, and HBO’s critically acclaimed drama *Big Love*. Her portrayal of Rhonda Volmer on *Big Love* introduced her talents to an older audience and demonstrated her ability to transition beyond child acting roles.

Despite her early success, Chase faced personal struggles later in life. Reports indicate she dealt with significant hardships in recent years and had been battling serious health challenges prior to her death. Her boyfriend, Roy Hernandez, had reportedly launched fundraising efforts to assist with her care as her condition worsened.

News of Chase’s death has prompted an outpouring of grief from fans who grew up watching her work. Many have reflected on the unique impact she had across multiple genres, from family entertainment to horror films.

Few child actors leave behind two characters as culturally significant as Lilo and Samara. One brought joy, friendship, and heart to millions of children around the world. The other delivered nightmares that horror fans still remember decades later.

Chase’s remarkable career demonstrated a versatility rarely seen in young performers. Whether she was bringing warmth and humor to an animated Disney heroine or delivering one of the most chilling performances in horror movie history, she left a lasting mark on audiences around the world.

Daveigh Chase’s career may have begun at a young age, but the performances she left behind ensured that her work would endure long after the cameras stopped rolling. Her passing marks a tragic loss for Hollywood and for the countless fans whose childhoods were shaped by her unforgettable roles. While her life was cut tragically short, her legacy will continue through the beloved characters and memorable performances that made her one of the most recognizable young stars of her generation.

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MLB Rocked After AG Drops Hammer On Player For Hidden Message On Hat

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MLB Rocked After AG Drops Hammer On Player For Hidden Message On Hat

What Major League Baseball likely expected to be a routine Pride Night celebration in San Francisco has instead evolved into a national debate over religious liberty, free expression, and whether Christian athletes are being treated differently than other groups when they publicly express their beliefs.

The controversy began when several San Francisco Giants pitchers wrote Bible verse references on their hats during the team’s annual Pride Night event. Among them was starting pitcher Landen Roupp, who later explained that the scripture references reflected his Christian faith and served as a reminder of God’s covenant.

“There’s no hate at all,” Roupp said. “It’s just what I stand for, and what I stand in. I believe in God.”

For millions of Americans, the statement seemed straightforward and consistent with a long tradition of athletes expressing their religious beliefs. Professional athletes regularly thank God after victories, wear crosses during competition, kneel in prayer before games, and reference scripture in interviews and social media posts.

But after the game, MLB reportedly warned the players that writing messages on official uniforms violated league rules.

On its face, the league’s position may appear simple. Uniform policies exist throughout professional sports, and leagues often claim they must be enforced consistently.

However, critics argue that consistency is precisely the issue.

Over the years, fans have witnessed athletes display messages supporting a wide range of social, political, and cultural causes. Players have honored fallen teammates, promoted charitable campaigns, worn cause-related apparel, and displayed symbols associated with various advocacy movements. During Pride celebrations, leagues and teams routinely encourage displays supporting LGBTQ causes and identities.

As a result, many observers are now asking whether the league would have reacted the same way if the messages written on the hats had supported a different cause.

That question has transformed what might have been a minor rules dispute into a much broader cultural conversation.

For many Christians, the incident reinforces a growing perception that expressions aligned with progressive causes are frequently celebrated, while traditional religious viewpoints often receive increased scrutiny.

Across corporate America, higher education, entertainment, and professional sports, many religious Americans believe they are witnessing an uneven application of principles such as diversity, inclusion, and self-expression.

Organizations regularly encourage individuals to embrace their identities and bring their authentic selves into public life. Employees are told to share their stories. Athletes are praised for speaking out on issues they care about. Public figures are encouraged to use their platforms to advocate for causes they believe in.

Yet critics argue that when those expressions involve traditional Christian beliefs—particularly on issues that intersect with modern cultural debates—the response often changes.

Rather than celebration, they say, the response frequently becomes regulation, criticism, or attempts to limit the expression altogether.

This perception has elevated the controversy beyond sports.

Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier has reportedly launched an inquiry into whether religious discrimination may have occurred.

Vice President J.D. Vance has also publicly weighed in, helping push the story from the sports section into the national political conversation.

At the center of the debate is a principle deeply rooted in American constitutional tradition: equal treatment under the law and equal protection of free expression.

The First Amendment protects speech regardless of whether it is popular or unpopular. It protects majority viewpoints and minority viewpoints alike. Religious liberty has long been considered one of the foundational freedoms that distinguishes the American system from many others around the world.

Supporters of the Giants pitchers argue that defending a player’s right to express Christian beliefs does not require opposition to LGBTQ Americans or support for discrimination of any kind.

Instead, they argue that the same standards should apply equally to everyone.

If diversity and inclusion are truly core values, critics contend, those principles should include religious viewpoints as well. If self-expression is encouraged for one group, it should be encouraged for all groups. If organizations celebrate personal authenticity, that standard should not depend on whether a person’s beliefs align with prevailing cultural trends.

Many Americans who are not religious have expressed similar concerns, arguing that equal treatment is ultimately the issue.

You do not have to share someone’s beliefs to defend their right to express them.

Whether Major League Baseball intended it or not, its handling of the situation has reignited a debate that extends far beyond baseball diamonds and locker rooms.

The controversy has become a broader discussion about whether religious Americans receive the same cultural freedoms that institutions routinely promise to others.

As more public attention focuses on the issue, professional sports leagues, corporations, and other major institutions may face increasing pressure to demonstrate that their commitments to inclusion, diversity, and free expression apply equally to everyone—regardless of political affiliation, cultural background, or religious faith.

For many Americans following the controversy, the debate is no longer about a few Bible verses written on baseball caps. It is about whether religious expression is being afforded the same respect and protection as other forms of personal identity and public speech in modern American life.

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Judge Forcibly Removed From Trump Case After Sick Plot Revealed

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Judge Forcibly Removed From Trump Case After Sick Plot Revealed

Here’s a rewritten version in a pro-Trump tone, expanded to 450+ words and formatted as a news article:

A federal judge at the center of a growing ethics controversy has stepped aside from a major Georgia election case after the Trump administration’s Justice Department challenged her ability to remain impartial.

U.S. District Judge Eleanor Ross formally recused herself Monday from overseeing the high-profile litigation, handing what many observers view as a significant procedural victory to the Trump administration and its efforts to ensure politically sensitive election cases are heard by judges free from any appearance of bias.

Ross announced her decision in a brief court filing, offering little explanation beyond stating that her recusal was necessary “in the interest of justice.”

The move came shortly after the Department of Justice filed a motion seeking her removal from the case, arguing that several aspects of her background and recent conduct raised legitimate concerns about impartiality.

Federal prosecutors pointed specifically to Ross’s prior professional affiliations and her attendance at a political event connected to Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, whose prosecutions related to President Donald Trump became some of the most politically charged legal battles in the nation.

The Justice Department argued that regardless of Ross’s personal views, the circumstances created at least the appearance of bias, which federal law seeks to avoid in order to maintain public confidence in the judicial system.

The challenge also arrived amid renewed scrutiny surrounding a separate judicial misconduct investigation involving Ross.

That investigation, which became public earlier this year, concluded that Ross engaged in an inappropriate relationship with a police officer inside her judicial chambers, attended a partisan political event, and initially denied aspects of the allegations before later acknowledging the relationship.

The inquiry began after a law clerk reported concerns regarding Ross’s conduct.

Although Ross ultimately received a private reprimand rather than more severe disciplinary action, the findings fueled questions about her judgment and impartiality, particularly in politically sensitive matters.

Investigators additionally determined that Ross attended a victory celebration associated with Willis, a figure who remains deeply polarizing among both supporters and critics of President Trump.

The Justice Department sought Ross’s removal under 28 U.S.C. § 455, a federal statute requiring judges to recuse themselves whenever their impartiality might reasonably be questioned.

Importantly, the law does not require proof of actual bias or misconduct. Instead, it focuses on maintaining public confidence by preventing situations in which a reasonable observer could question a judge’s neutrality.

Because Ross voluntarily stepped aside, the court never ruled on the merits of the Justice Department’s motion. As a result, there was no formal legal determination regarding whether her recusal was required under federal law.

Still, supporters of the administration viewed the outcome as validation of concerns that politically sensitive election cases must be handled with exceptional care.

“The recusal vindicates the President’s commitment to ensuring that election cases are heard by impartial judges who follow the law, not their personal politics,” a White House spokesperson said following the announcement.

The underlying lawsuit centers on allegations involving Georgia election procedures and voter records. Defendants in the case have denied wrongdoing and continue to challenge the legal basis of the claims.

The recusal means the case will now return to the clerk’s office and be reassigned through the Northern District of Georgia’s standard random-selection process.

Legal observers expect the transition to slow the litigation temporarily as the new judge reviews an extensive record that already includes thousands of pages of discovery materials, multiple filings, and several unresolved motions.

Defense attorneys opposed the Justice Department’s effort to remove Ross and warned that replacing the judge could create delays and additional expenses.

Following the recusal, one defense attorney criticized the government’s actions.

The attorney said the recusal “raises serious concerns about whether the Justice Department is using ethics rules as a tool to manipulate case assignments.”

The attorney added that the defense would closely monitor the reassignment process.

Despite those objections, supporters of the administration argue that maintaining public confidence in election-related litigation is paramount, particularly after years of controversy surrounding election integrity and politically charged prosecutions.

For now, the questions raised by the Justice Department remain unresolved in the official court record. What is clear, however, is that one of the most closely watched election cases in Georgia will now move forward under a new judge as the legal battle continues.

The clerk’s office is expected to assign a replacement judge in the coming days. Once that occurs, the court will likely schedule a status conference to establish a revised timeline and determine whether any prior rulings should be revisited before the case proceeds.

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