Women's football in Australia is over.
A team of five men posing as women defeated all opponents in the season finale and grand championship.
The Flying Bats' five sluggers are undefeated this year and recently won the coveted Beryl Ackroyd Trophy and a $1,000 prize.
“The team will likely continue to field only men who identify as “trans women,” meaning it's unlikely an all-female team will win again. This competition isn't just unfair; it's deeply unfair and downright dangerous for women.”
17 wins, 0 losses
Thanks to sporting authorities bowing to “trans” ideology, the Flying Bats have been allowed to compete in the North West Sydney Football Women's Premier competition.
However, Reduxx reports that the 2024 season was not as “competitive” as the team went undefeated with a 17-0 record and scored an astounding 76 points, while their competitors only managed to score 8 points throughout the season.
But surprisingly, championship losers West Pennant Hills Cherrybrook Football Club managed just four goals against the men's team, losing narrowly 5-4.
Reduxx continued that, in keeping with leftist demands that such events should receive as little publicity as possible, the organizers had banned cameras, likely to avoid anyone recording the Bats fighters slamming their female opponents to the ground, leaving them with concussions and broken arms and legs.
“Australian talk radio host Ben Fordham spoke to a member of the crowd at yesterday's game,” Reduxx revealed.
According to a caller who identified himself only as David, security guards searched bags and asked everyone in attendance to discard any recording devices.
“There was pretty heavy security and they actually did check bags to make sure no one was bringing in anything the size of a mobile phone to film the game. Security told me they had to ask people to leave the premises if they wouldn't let them in their bags. So they were cracking down on people trying to film there because flying bats have been a hot topic in football recently,” David said.
“West Pennant had a really vocal crowd and when the final whistle blew you could hear the boos from the stands at West Pennant Hills. It was ear-splitting,” he added.
Unsurprisingly, the comments on Facebook beneath the team's congratulations were, to say the least, less than enthusiastic about the spectacle.
“Shame on the FA for allowing this to happen,” wrote one angry commenter, saying the girls had been “robbed”.
Another said it was time for women to fight back against what was clearly an unfair competition.
“These women should not have been playing,” the post read.
You tried your best but you should not have played. Unless we women stand up for our rights, it will only get worse.
Yet another said “trans women” should be barred from women's sports.
Everyone knows that only women's teams should be allowed to compete in women's tournaments.
You are the true champions of the women's league!
We need to keep fighting to return women's sports to girls-only sports, and trans men should play somewhere else, that's fair and safe.
We do not accept complaints
North West Sydney football rules allow “transgender women” to play on the women's team – and it would be a shame if women don't like it.
“Following Flying Bats FC's resounding victory, the other six football clubs who competed in the women's divisions held an informal meeting at the Ranch Hotel in North Ryde on March 17,” Reduxx reported.
The North West Sydney Football Association became aware of the conversation and scheduled a formal meeting. An email was sent to club presidents from North West Sydney Football Association CEO Matthew Gerasitano instructing them to attend a meeting to be held at Christie Park on the evening of March 20.
The email sent to the football club's chairman included a resource produced by the eSafety Commission titled “Online Hate Speech”. Above the attachment was the following sentence highlighted in yellow: “If individuals who post extremely harmful content fail to comply with a takedown notice, you may seek civil penalties or fines (up to $111,000) against the perpetrators.”
At the meeting, which was also attended by Football NSW CEO John Tsatsimas, attendees were told the decision to forfeit the match against the Flying Bats and boycott participation would be subject to “disciplinary action”.
24 women quit
It remains to be seen how effective this threat will be. After the Flying Bats defeated Macquarie Dragons 4-0 to win the coveted Beryl Ackroyd Cup, 24 women quit St Patrick's Football Club.
Reduxx has identified one of the most dangerous Flying Bats: Riley Dennis, real name Justin.
Last year, while Dennis was playing for another team, the 32-year-old slugger knocked a petite woman to the ground as she was chasing a ball, and a video showed Dennis walking away while the woman lay motionless.
“A month prior, Dennis was said to have injured another female player, who reportedly had to be treated in hospital for her injuries,” the website reported.
A few years ago, a player with a flying bat broke a woman's leg, ending her playing career.
After Dennis injured the first woman, Kiralee Smith of Binary Australia started a letter-writing campaign against him, which has received around 12,000 letters. Reduxx reported:
Ms Smith, who played a role in raising awareness of injuries to female athletes, was visited by NSW Police and given an Violence Prevention Order (AVO) banning her from discussing or approaching Ms Dennis on March 30 that year. The AVO was revoked by authorities in September but Ms Smith continues to face legal action for allegedly identifying some of the male players who played against the women.
Transgender control of women's football is so thorough, and enforcement of speech restrictions so totalitarian, that a woman who helped a Bats victim with a broken leg was given an eight-week suspension for making some understandably spiteful comments, even an apology to no avail.
Gay activists have a message for female athletes who oppose this madness, Reduxx pointed out.
“Transphobes” need to undergo “a bit more rigorous training.”