In Attempt to Insult Top Women’s Sports Defender, Simone Biles Confirms Difference in the Sexes

The most decorated American Olympic gymnast in history, Simone Biles, may have bit off more than she could chew over the weekend when she hypocritically took aim at the woman touting the same kind of sex-specific protections that paved the way for her domination on the mat, beam, and vault.

The fallout started when Biles used her Friday night to snipe at prominent women’s sports defender Riley Gaines as a “bully.” Biles was upset that Gaines noticed the Minnesota State High School League turned off the comments on a post celebrating the victory of a softball team whose “star player is a boy.”

“[B]ully someone your own size, which would ironically be a male,” Biles wrote on X, tagging Gaines. . .

Bodyshaming Gaines, a fit 5’ 7” female, by comparing her physique to a male’s is not simply a low blow on Biles’ part. It’s an accidental yet important admission to the indisputable fact that men and women are biologically different.

As Biles’ post suggests, the widely recognized distinctions between the sexes go well beyond the XX and XY chromosomes in DNA. Men, on average, tend to be taller, heavier, and more muscular than women. This is especially true of male athletes, who the American College of Sports Medicine recognize as “stronger, more powerful, and faster than females of similar age and training status.” (Read more from “In Attempt to Insult Top Women’s Sports Defender, Simone Biles Confirms Difference in the Sexes” HERE)