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Minnesota Aurora FC has signed Isaac Ranson, a transgender man and former Cal State Fullerton goalkeeper, to its women’s soccer team. Ranson was twice named Big West Conference Goalkeeper of the Year, and he is now the first out transgender player in Aurora’s history.
For years, the anti-trans sports movement has argued that athletes should only be allowed to play on teams matching the sex they were assigned at birth. That demand has almost always been aimed at transgender girls and women, with the claim that they do not belong in women’s sports. But Ranson’s signing puts that argument in plain view from the other direction.
Ranson identifies as a man, lives as a man, and has spoken openly about the complexity of playing in women’s soccer while not being a woman. Under the “birth sex only” rule that anti-trans activists keep demanding, a transgender man is exactly where they say he is supposed to be: on a women’s team.
That is the part of this story the community has been waiting for, because it shows how poorly these rules actually fit real people. The moment the rule is applied consistently, it stops sounding like a clean solution and starts showing what it really is: a political framework built to police transgender bodies, not to create fair or thoughtful sports policy.
Aurora’s team response has been clear. The club welcomed Ranson, supported him, and said it believes everyone deserves the chance to play. Ranson has also said he feels safe in women’s soccer because of the community around him, even as he continues to be open about who he is.
This is not the scenario anti-trans activists usually want to debate. It is the real-world outcome of the rule they keep demanding. If sports must be divided strictly by gender assigned at birth, then transgender men will be placed on women’s teams. If that suddenly feels uncomfortable to the same people who demanded it, then the problem was never really confusion about sports—it was refusing to see transgender people as whole human beings.
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