Chelsea Wolfe Bio, Age, BMX , Teeth, Transition, Before And After, Partner, Net Worth, Height,  

Chelsea Wolfe Biography

Chelsea Wolfe (Chelsea Andrea Wolfe) an American trans BMX freestyle rider. She started off with BMX racing at the age of 6 years old back in April of 2000, and competed at the state and national level up to her early 20’s.

Chelsea Wolfe BMX Age

Wolfe was born on 5th of May 1993, in Lake Park, Florida, USA.

Chelsea Wolfe Teeth

Wolfe got involved in an accident that saw her loose her front six teeth. In an interview, she shared: “I had an accident where I flipped over the handlebars smashed out my front six teeth, crushed my jaw, split my lip in two places, broke my…”

Chelsea Wolfe Height

Wolfe stands tall at a height of 5 feet 9 inches (175.26 cm) and has an average body weight.

Chelsea Wolfe Net Worth

Wolfe has an estimated net worth of $1 million.

Chelsea Wolfe BMX Transition

Wolfe competed in the BMX Freestyle at the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo. The International Olympic Committee (IOC) policy specifies conditions on which those who transition from male to female are as well eligible to compete in the female category.

Wolfe as well declared that her gender identity is female her declaration cannot be changed, for sporting purposes, for a minimum of four years. She as well demonstrated that her total testosterone level is below a specific measurement for at least 12 months prior to her first competition.

Chelsea Wolfe BMX

Wolfe on her 15th birthday, she developed an interest in BMX freestyle and after much prodding and as well trying to ride a department store bike from the bicycle co-op having volunteered. Her parents then bought her her first freestyle bike for her birthday but she broke the frame in five months time. She the got hooked and has drifted further into freestyle ever since.

She had her first freestyle competitions back in 2014 in the Florida BMX park series and having some years competing at the state level. Back in 2016, she srated travelling nationally for BMX freestyle and the announcement was shared the sport would be included in the 2020 Olympic Games. She started practising for competing internationally and had course for her first UCI C1 event two years later.

After having strong placings in North American C1 events, she got to be first into her rookie UCI World Cup season and she earned overall points being ranked 5th in the world. Back in 2019 season she finished third place both the US National and Pan-American Championships. On the 11th place at the 2019 UCI World Championship had the lowest finish of the season, she’s still very proud of that result for her first year.

Chelsea Wolfe Olympics

Wolfe qualified to U.S. at the 2020 Summer Olympics in Tokyo. On 12th of June 12, 2021, she shared on her wrote on Instagram on what it meant to qualify as an alternate for the Olympics as a transgender athlete.

“I searched for so long trying to find out if there had ever been a professional trans bmx rider to show me that who I am would be okay and unfortunately I found no one,” Wolfe wrote. “Eventually I started to meet some amazing women who helped me accept that I am a woman just like any other and that I deserve a place to exist in the world just like everyone else.”

Back in March 25, 2020, she threatened that she will burn a US flag on the podium if she won an Olympic medal. “My goal is to win the Olympics so I can burn a US flag on the podium. This is what they focus on during a pandemic. Hurting trans children,” She shared on Facebook together with a link to a PinkNews story about the Trump administration’s stance on transgender girls in female athletics.

She is identified as a transgender woman, having shared on Facebook post, that has since got deleted, doesn’t mean she doesn’t care about her home country.

“Anyone who thinks that I don’t care about the United States is sorely mistaken,” Wolfe told Fox News. “One of the reasons why I work so hard to represent the United States in international competition is to show the world that this country has morals and values, that it’s not all of the bad things that we’re known for. I take a stand against fascism because I care about this country and I’m not going to let it fall into the hands of fascists after so many people have fought and sacrificed to prevent fascism from taking hold abroad. As a citizen who wants to be proud of my home country, I’m sure as hell not going to let it take hold here.”

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