BREAKING: NCAA Vacates Lia Thomas Titles, Reassigns Medals to Riley Gaines in Historic Reversal
By Jordan Reyes, Sports Equity Correspondent Indianapolis, IN – November 18, 2025
The National Collegiate Athletic Association delivered a thunderbolt to women’s sports Tuesday afternoon: every national title, All-American honor, and medal awarded to transgender swimmer Lia Thomas during the 2021–22 season has been officially vacated and reassigned. In the most consequential ruling in NCAA history, Riley Gaines—Thomas’s closest competitor and most vocal critic—has been declared the sole fifth-place finisher in the 2022 NCAA 200-yard freestyle and has received the corresponding trophy and recognition. The 500-yard freestyle title, previously held by Thomas, has been transferred to silver medalist Emma Weyant.

The 38-page decision, signed by NCAA President Charlie Baker and released at 1:47 p.m. ET, states unequivocally:
“After exhaustive review of physiological data, competitive equity analysis, and Title IX compliance obligations, the Association concludes that the participation of Lia Thomas in women’s events during the 2021–22 season created an unfair competitive advantage. Accordingly, all results from those events are vacated and reallocated to reflect the order of finish among biologically female athletes.”
It is the first time the NCAA has ever retroactively stripped titles from an individual athlete on the basis of gender-eligibility policy violations.
The reversal caps a three-year saga that began when Thomas, then a senior at the University of Pennsylvania, became the first openly transgender woman to win an NCAA Division I championship. Her victory in the 500-yard freestyle in Atlanta sparked immediate protests, congressional hearings, and a federal lawsuit filed by Gaines and fifteen other swimmers alleging Title IX discrimination. That suit, Gaines et al. v. NCAA, produced thousands of pages of discovery, including internal NCAA emails admitting officials “feared backlash” if they enforced stricter testosterone thresholds in real time.
Sources inside the NCAA’s legal department confirm universities were quietly notified of the impending decision last Wednesday. Penn, facing potential loss of federal funding under President Trump’s July 2025 executive order on “biological fairness in women’s sport,” did not contest the ruling.
Riley Gaines, now 25 and a prominent advocate through her Riley Gaines Center, issued a short but pointed statement outside her Nashville home:
“Fairness isn’t political; it’s foundational. This isn’t about hate; it’s about protecting the integrity of women’s sport for the next generation. Today, the NCAA finally chose courage over cowardice.”
Lia Thomas, who has not competed since her unsuccessful 2024 appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, released a measured response through her attorney:
“This decision erases not just my achievements but the very real progress transgender athletes have fought to secure. We are exploring all legal options, including federal civil-rights claims.”
Reaction was swift and polarized.

Conservative leaders celebrated. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis posted on X: “Common sense wins. Women’s sports are for women.” Senator Marsha Blackburn (R-TN), who chaired 2023 hearings on the issue, called it “a complete vindication of every female athlete who refused to stay silent.”
Progressive voices condemned the move as discriminatory. The ACLU vowed to file an emergency injunction, arguing the NCAA lacked authority to retroactively apply policies that did not exist in 2022. Athlete Ally called the decision “a dangerous precedent that will drive trans youth away from sport entirely.”
Inside the swimming community, emotions ran high. Olympic champion Katie Ledecky, who has remained neutral throughout, told reporters in Austin: “I respect the NCAA’s attempt to find clarity, but I also ache for every athlete caught in this storm.”
The practical fallout is immediate:
- NCAA record books were updated by 4:00 p.m. Tuesday.
- Gaines receives the physical fifth-place trophy from 2022, which she says will be displayed at the Riley Gaines Center.
- Weyant is now officially the 2022 500-yard national champion.
- All-American lists for 2021–22 have been rewritten, elevating dozens of cisgender women.
The financial ripple could be significant. Sources say the NCAA has set aside an eight-figure settlement fund for affected athletes and is bracing for lawsuits from both Thomas and the University of Pennsylvania.

Perhaps most importantly, the ruling effectively rewrites NCAA transgender policy going forward. Baker announced a new framework, effective immediately, that adopts World Aquatics’ model: only athletes who never experienced male puberty may compete in women’s elite events. An “open” division will be offered at all championship meets starting in 2026.
Swimming Australia, currently threatening an Olympic boycott over similar concerns, hailed the decision as “a global turning point.” World Aquatics president Husain Al-Musallam issued a rare personal statement: “The NCAA has shown leadership the rest of us must now follow.”
As dusk settled over Indianapolis, the NCAA flag still flew at half-mast from last week’s Veterans Day observance, an unintended but fitting symbol. Something fundamental in American collegiate sport has indeed shifted forever.
Whether it is a restoration of fairness or an act of erasure depends entirely on which side of the pool deck you stand.
One thing, however, is no longer up for debate: the era of case-by-case transgender inclusion in women’s collegiate sports is over.