newYou can listen to Fox’s news articles!
Female athletes sent a fiery message Nike Within the promotion of fairness in women’s sports and the exclusion of biological men who compete with them at various levels of competition.
What would the XX-XY Athletics ads be able to send messages to several athletes to Nike? Riley GainesMacey Boggs, Lauren Miller and Payton McNabb were one of those featured in the video.
For sports coverage on foxnews.com, click here

From left, Lauren Miller, Riley Gaines and Payton McNabb fire messages at Nike. (xx-xy track and field)
“If I had the opportunity to talk to Nike, I would tell them to do it,” he said with former Kentucky Wildcats star swimmer Gaines. Outkick contributorsaid in the clip. “That’s your slogan, isn’t it Nike? You just do it. When I say it, I mean I’m right. And it’s defending women and biological reality.”
Miller, a professional golfer who participated in the 2022 US Women’s Open, asked the company to “think about your daughter.”
“If you keep breaking into men and boys, women’s sports will be erased,” he said.
After being hit in the face by a biologic man during a high school volleyball game, McNab, who suffered brain damage, says she had “dreamed” about sports in college, but the incident shattered them.
A high school girl forced a truck meeting official to take off her shirt “protecting girls’ sports”

Melissa Batie-Smoose has appeared in XX-XY Athletics Ad. (Fox News Channel)
“You say you support women, but you’re not doing anything,” said Boggs, a high school volleyball player. “You use us when it’s convenient, but in private, you’re not doing anything about it.”
Former NCAA swimmer Kaitlynn Wheeler, Canada’s weightlifting April Hutchinson, formerly Nevada Wolf Pack Volleyball player Sia Liilii and former San Jose State assistant coach Melissa Batie-Smoose also spoke out.
Nike did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Fox News Digital.
The company has been attacked over recent weeks over allegations that it funded research to study transgender youth and research to study the issues of men competing in girls and women’s sports. The first inkling of this study was featured in an article in the New York Times.

People will visit the Nike Store on 5th Avenue on December 9th, 2022 during New York City’s holiday season. (Reuters/Eduardo Munoz)
Click here to get the Fox News app
Nike I said to the outkick This study was “not initialized” and “not progressing.”
Follow Fox News Digital’s X’s sports coverage, And subscribe Fox News Sports Huddle Newsletter.