As the father of five (two who have competed at the HS level), I understand the father's position.
How would you feel if Kate Hall was your daughter?
Boys Dad-...
"As her father, I never think about it as competition," Rahsaan Yearwood said. "This is not about winning and losing races. This is about the health of my teenage daughter.
"In terms of the fairness aspect, I don't think about that as a father. I only think about, is my daughter happy, healthy and able to participate in what she wants to do? I don't care if she wins or loses. I don't care if she wins and gives the medals back. She got to compete as a girl where she feels she should compete. That's all that matters to me."
Child-...
"Overall, I'm happy," Andraya said. "My goal was to get first in my events, which I did. I wanted to get personal records, which I didn't.
"Obviously, I've gotten some negative attention [just go on the internet] but I don't worry about it much. I've gotten a lot of good attention for who I am, which is really nice; it helps me with my race."
Dad-..."I think anyone who makes a 15-year-old running in Class M in Connecticut into a bigger story than it needs to be — this is not someone that transitioned as a senior trying to get a scholarship to college," he said. "This is someone who has been working toward this her whole life.
"Having played football, there are guys who were 350 pounds," Rahsaan Yearwood said. "It wasn't fair that as a 225-pound linebacker, they came to block me, but that's the nature of the beast."
I personally think this dad is talking out of both sides of his...mouth...Yes he cares about his child, that's great...but at the expense of other children and with no regard for them at all. Not what I consider to be worthy of praise.