Carli Lloyd Confirms USWNT Lost To 'Bigger, Stronger, Faster' Team Of U15 Boys
"There is no difference between male and female athletes! It's not unfair for men to transition to women and compete against biological women!" The common refrain among the "pro-trans activists" who regularly attack Riley Gaines. That argument was dealt a massive blow as Carli Lloyd confirmed the story that the USWNT lost to a team of boys 15 years old and younger.
They didn't just lose. They lost 5-2. In soccer, that's a blowout.
I feel the need to repeat the headline here for emphasis. The US Women's National Team (USWNT), the best women's soccer team in the United States (probably the world at the time, although definitely not this year), lost to a group of U15 boys from Dallas, Texas.
That means the team didn't necessarily comprise the best U15 boys in the entire country. Just the ones who played for FC Dallas. And, the USWNT also lost to a "youth Bayern Munich" team according to Lloyd, and who knows what ages those kids were.
But, hey, being born male comes with no inherent physical advantage over female counterparts, right?
According to Lloyd, there is absolutely an advantage. Duh.
That kid is 15 years old. He's much larger than the best female soccer players on the planet. That matters in sports. Duh.
The delicious irony here, of course, is that former USWNT player Megan Rapinoe says that biological men should be allowed to play women's sports.
Despite an admission from her teammate that men are "bigger, stronger, faster" than women (and that at least two youth boys teams defeated the Women's National Team in her career), Rapinoe would rather stay on the right side of her far-left-wing cronies than apply common sense.
Carli Lloyd's USWNT admission further proves Clay Travis' point about WNBA
OutKick founder Clay Travis recently wagered $1 million of his own money that a high school boys basketball team would beat the WNBA champion Las Vegas Aces.
One of the members of that team, Chelsea Gray, called Travis a "dumbass" for suggesting that a high school boys team could beat the Aces. That's when Travis announced his challenge.
Of course, this won't happen. The WNBA players know they'd lose to a good high school varsity boys basketball team.
Consider the USWNT example. The US Women's National Team comprised all the best female soccer players in the country. In this case, we're not talking about the WNBA All-Star team, which would be a more apt comparison.
Plus, the boys soccer team was composed of players 15 years old and younger. Presumably, a high school basketball state championship team would include mostly 17-and-18-year-old players.
So, you essentially have a lesser version of the USWNT playing an older version of the U15 boys team.
Everyone knows exactly how that would play out.
Which is exactly why it will never happen.