![Lia Thomas.](https://cdn.businessinsider.nl/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/62224fd69908630019987046-1.jpg?ver=1646427935)
- Lia Thomas has faced pushback and media scrutiny for competing on Penn's women's swim team.
- In a Sports Illustrated feature, the trans athlete explained why she belongs on the women's side.
- "The very simple answer is that I'm not a man. I'm a woman." Thomas said.
Lia Thomas — a college senior who has been at the center of the debate on transgender participation in women's sports — has no doubt that competing as a member of the University of Pennsylvania's women's swimming team is where she belongs.
And in a recent Sports Illustrated feature written by Robert Sanchez, she offered a remarkably straightforward explanation for anyone who's confused as to why she's competing on — and dominating — the women's side.
![Lia Thomas.](https://cdn.businessinsider.nl/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/621fe35cd72a25001973cb78-1.jpg?ver=1646427943)
"The very simple answer is that I'm not a man," Thomas said. "I'm a woman, so I belong on the women's team."
"Trans people deserve that same respect every other athlete gets," she added.
Many of those pushing back on Thomas' participation in women's athletics — including one anonymous parent of a Penn swimmer — believe that she deserves to be treated with "respect and dignity," just as any other woman should be.
"But it's not transphobic to say I disagree with where she's swimming," the self-described progressive parent added.
![Lia Thomas.](https://cdn.businessinsider.nl/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/621ff0f804579d001893bd83-1.jpg?ver=1646427950)
Thomas doesn't buy that logic. To her, there are two clear-cut options, as Sanchez explained in his piece; "Either you back her fully as a woman or you don't."
"I'm a woman, just like anybody else on the team," Thomas said. "I've always viewed myself as just a swimmer. It's what I've done for so long; it's what I love."
![Lia Thomas, a transgender woman, swims for the University of Pennsylvania at an Ivy League swim meet against Harvard University in Cambridge](https://cdn.businessinsider.nl/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/61fa5c00ef63e10018101ad4-2.jpg?ver=1646427955)
The 22-year-old is set to compete alongside two Quakers teammates at the NCAA Swimming & Diving Championships in Georgia March 16-19. Thomas will race in the 100-, 200-, and 500-meter free — all three events in which she won the Ivy League championship — with a chance to break longstanding records and make history.