
Minnesota softball player speaks out after defeat to trans pitcher
2025-10-03 19:14:00
newYou can now listen to Fox News!
Kendall Kotzmakher will never forget the day when she entered the mixture box against Marissa Rottenberger.
He was Minnesota State The semi -finals of the championship. Kotzmakher and her colleagues at White Bear High School were looking to go to the state championship match. Kotzmacher just moved to White Bear Lake to her last year with the goal of winning a championship, along with her little sister and teammate.
But Rottenberger, a transformed athlete, was on the hill that day for their opponent, Champlin Park Secondary School.
Click here for more sports coverage on FoxNews.com

Marissa Rothnberger has a complete closure in the quarter -finals of the Minnesota State for Girls. (Amber Harding/Outkick)
“They move ten times more,” Kotzmakher told Fox News Digital from Rothheenberger’s Pitches.
“I have seen movement movements, so when your hands are greater than a biological female in that era, in Minnesota in particular, you revolve around the ball ten times more. I would like to say in reality that this athlete was not in his best match on that day, but even half of their best they have, they are still surprising after us more, which makes it cannot strike.”
Kotzmacher is closed enough to make some connection off Rothnberger on that day. But Rottenberger held Lake Pep Bear to only two halves on seven strikes. This was the number of forms of paths recorded by Ruthenburger in the post -season. But this was not enough, because in the last half, Ruthnberger came to hit him as well.
After he reached a doubling to stir a central march earlier that day, Rothnberger achieved a double to lead the final half, and set up a candidate for the picnic to win the Chambal Park match.
“It was half of the appearance. This athlete was not swinging to his full potential, and the ball was still very difficult,” said Kotzmasher, who played the mask behind Rottenberger on that day. “It was difficult to call the stadiums, because it seemed as if it were all the stadium that I called, could hit this athlete.”
The Kotzmacher’s profession has ended in high school there. You will never get another chance to achieve her childhood dream in winning the high school championship. She fell to her young sister’s arms and started desire.
“I just wanted just to leave immediately. I didn’t want to do anything else,” said Kotzmacher. “I couldn’t even address what happened just.
“How do you acknowledge that you lost in front of a biological man? How can you deal with those events that have happened? This was something on that whole night, I still cannot do that … We lost in front of a biological man in the female state championship.”
President Donald Trump administration tackled the accident, and decided that the MEDE Ministry of Education and the MSHSL Secondary Schools League (MSHSL) (MSHSL) Violation of the ninth address By allowing this to happen. The Foundation until October 10 has to change its policies to allow only females in girls’ sports, or to refer the risk to the Ministry of Justice.
Inside the transformed volleyball crisis in Gavin News

Chambal Park celebrates the country’s championship while Bloomington Jefferson looks. (Amber Harding)
A press release of the Ministry of Education announced the performance of the jug in the 2025 season for the last campaign, noting that “the male jugusted with sports during five consecutive matches, does not give up one, but it was obtained for 35 roles and hit 27 female fighters.”
Kotzmacher is its first year in the college, where the soft ball of the West Michigan University plays. But, for her younger sister, she hopes that Minnesota agencies will comply with the CEO to keep biological males from sports and women. Rottenberger still has one secondary school season.
Minnesota became one of the first states in the country to announce that it will not comply with the executive in February. The democratic leadership of Minnesota, led by state governor Tim Walz, prosecutor Keith Ellison, and a legislative council for the democratic majority state, has taken some of the most difficult situations on commitment to empowering biological males to compete in girls during the Trump period.
Ellison filed a lawsuit against Trump and the Ministry of Justice, and boasted about their “prosecution first” on this case. Elson is also on the defendant side by a lawsuit by three other jugs in the Minnesota game for girls, who remained unknown, claiming their rights to the ninth title last season as well.
However, Ellison’s office defended the concept of allowing males to play in girls’ sports.
“In addition to exercising and fun in the competition, exercise comes with many benefits for young people. You are building friendships that can last for life, learn how to work as part of a team, and you feel that you belong.” “I think it is wrong to direct one group of students, who are already facing higher levels of bullying and harassment, and I told these children that they cannot be in the team because of those they are. I will continue to defend the rights of all students to exercise with their friends and peers.”
The state legislature of the state failed to pass a draft law that would prohibit athletes who cross the sport of sports, “The Sports Preservation Law”, in March. One shy vote fell from progress to the Walzan office. Meanwhile, the lawmaker, Lehuklovsky, who is known as “non -bilateral”, called the draft “another version of bullying and genocide approved by the state.
Kotzmacher was in the state capital that day. She was on a march outside the capital building, where she was watching Riley Jins and Captain Jacques Buruer in Minnesota Vikings, Minnesota, Minnesota.
“This is a kind of arousing, like” I will not back down from this issue and I will talk about other girls as [Gaines] “He spoke to me,” said Kotzmacher.
Click here to get the Fox News app
In addition to the admiration of Gaines, Kotzacher is also close to the XX-XYTics Jennifer Sey during the recent height of the activity on the issue of “saving women’s sports”.
But for Kotzmacher, this is only one of the many issues that have turned it and its teenager peers in Minnesota against the democratic authorities for a long time in the state.
“At the present time, Mincota is going through a lot of turmoil. There is a lot of error in what is going on. It is not the same condition that I grew up,” she said. “It is no longer safe to be there, if we’ll be honest, I will not even be allowed to go to St. Paul or Minnabolis anymore, my parents will not be allowed, because it is very dangerous.”
Meanwhile, Kotzmacher hopes that the Trump administration takes at least measures to address the sports case of girls, because she hopes her younger sister will get a soft and safe season in 2026.
“Knowing that it is recognized at a higher level is a huge … Seeing that people finally do something about it and realize that they committed something wrong and took this away from us, this means a lot and I am excited to see what is happening and what it plays.”
Fox News Digital’s Sports coverage on xAnd subscribe to Newsletter of Fox News Sport Hold.
https://static.foxnews.com/foxnews.com/content/uploads/2025/10/tim-walz-kendall-kotzmacher-donald-trump1.jpg
Post Comment