Transgender basketball player Lexi Rodgers speaks on bid to play vs women… and her Opals dream
Lexi Rodgers, a transgender athlete who’s hoping to play within the ladies’s NBL1 league, has spoken publicly for the primary time.
She has referred to as for understanding and kindness after former basketball participant Andrew Bogut sparked an at-times offensive debate about whether or not she must be allowed to play towards fellow ladies.
Rodgers, who desires to play for the Kilsyth Cobras in NBL1 South, spoke with former WNBL MVP Anneli Maley – who has been certainly one of many WNBL gamers publicly supportive of taking part in towards transgender athletes – on her podcast Under the Surface.
Watch a mean of 9 LIVE NBA Regular Season video games per week on ESPN on Kayo Sports on ESPN on Kayo Sports. New to Kayo? Start your free trial now >
“It’s good to have a bit of a voice, now, because, when it’s this hypothetical person and people are making a picture of what a transgender athlete looks like in their head, 1: I don’t think it’s me, and, 2: I think it’s a bit harsh and people forget that there’s actually a person,” she mentioned.
“If you don’t get it and you don’t know 1: don’t yell stuff on the internet about it because it’s probably wrong, and, 2: Go and learn about it.
“Please be nice. It has been a hard week, so just try to remember that there’s actual people who are affected by these discussions and these debates.”
Rodgers transitioned over the previous few years after being a proficient basketball participant in her childhood, following a traumatic relationship breakdown and a terminal sickness suffered by her mom.
Having first felt female across the age of 10 or 11, Rodgers confided with a buddy who helped her realise her fact.
“It was overwhelming. It was such a quick move from ‘Oh, I’m going to be a more feminine guy’ to ‘I’m trans, there’s no doubt about it’,” she mentioned.
She is hopeful of taking part in within the WNBL and even for the Opals although her standing in skilled basketball will likely be decided by an eligibility panel.
The panel of Basketball Australia’s chief medical officer Dr Peter Harcourt, triple-Olympian and BA board member Suzy Batkovic and Notre Dame University sports activities and train doctor Associate Professor Diana Robinson met on Wednesday, studies News Corp.
