Women’s sports were never meant to be enough on their own.

Not the speed.

Not the strength.

Not the discipline carved into muscle and breath.

From the beginning, there was a quiet addendum stitched into every uniform:

Be impressive, but also be pleasing.

As if excellence alone might bore us.

As if a woman running, leaping, striking, enduring—

without spectacle—would somehow fail to justify the space she occupies.

So the fabric got smaller.

The cuts got tighter.

The rules got strangely specific about hips and thighs and waistlines,

about what must be visible in order to be valid.

No one said it out loud.

They never do.

They saidtradition.

They saidaesthetics.

They saidwhat audiences expect.

But expectations are just habits with better PR.

Men’s bodies are dressed for function.

Women’s bodies are dressed for interpretation.

He wears what allows him to perform.

She wears what allows her to be consumed.

And when someone asks—quietly, reasonably—

“Why can’t I cover more?”

the room stiffens.

Because modesty is disruptive.

Because it removes the distraction.

Because it asks the audience to watch the work instead of the body doing it.

That’s when the punishment arrives, disguised as policy.

A fine.

A warning.

A raised eyebrow wrapped in concern for the sport’s future.

As if the sport would collapse without exposed skin.

As if skill were fragile.

As if respect required cleavage.

They call it empowerment when the choice is pre-selected.

They call it freedom when opting out costs you visibility, money, or legitimacy.

But real freedom would sound like this:

Wear what serves your body.

Wear what lets you compete.

Wear what keeps your focus intact.

Instead, women are asked to perform twice—

once in the arena,

once for the gaze.

And somehow, we still wonder

why women’s sports struggle to be taken seriously.

You cannot build reverence on spectacle.

You cannot demand respect while pricing it through exposure.

Until women are allowed to show up as athletes—

not advertisements,

not compromises,

not visual appetizers for a distracted audience—

the uniform will keep telling the truth

that the rulebook refuses to say aloud.