ESPN broadcaster Sam Ponder responded to an attack from a sports columnist on Wednesday after the presenter was labeled a "bigot" for supporting fairness in women’s and girls' sports.

USA Today’s Nancy Armour criticized Ponder for her support of former NCAA swimmer Riley Gaines, who has called for transgender women to solely compete against those who are of their biological sex and not the one they identify as. Ponder agreed with Gaines’ messaging.

But for that, Armour called Ponder’s words "plain old bigotry."

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Headshot of Nancy Armour

Nancy Armour wrote the column taking issue with Sam Ponder. (USA Today via Imagn Content Services, LLC)

Ponder disagreed.

"Biology is not bigotry. Loving people does not require the absence of boundaries," she tweeted.

Ponder, and fellow ESPN colleague Sage Steele, have voiced their support for Gaines, who has taken the reins to lead the calls for transgender athletes to participate in sports against the gender they were born as instead of the gender they identify as. Gaines has been at the forefront since she tied with Lia Thomas at the NCAA Championships in 2022.

Ponder spoke about the issue again last week after Gaines tweeted the messages she received about transgender high school runners participating in the girls' division in California.

However, Armour took aim at Ponder in a column.

"Don’t be fooled by the people who screech about ‘fairness’ to cloak their bigotry toward transgender girls and women, the transgender girls and women who have the audacity to want to play sports, in particular," Armour started the column.

Sam Ponder in 2017

ESPN sideline reporter Sam Ponder looks on before the College Football National Championship game between the Alabama Crimson Tide and the Clemson Tigers at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida, on Jan. 9, 2017. (Kim Klement-USA Today Sports)

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"This is, and always was, about hate, fear and ignorance."

Armour particularly took issue with Ponder choosing to speak out about this issue rather than talk about how girls' and women’s sports don’t have equitable funding with boys and men.

"Did Ponder use her platform to express outrage at any of this? Urge her nearly half-million followers on Twitter to write or call their representatives and ask that women be given the funding and opportunities they rightfully deserve? Did she publicly participate in any of the many excellent documentaries, videos and commentary ESPN did to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Title IX last year? Or even Tweet about them?" Armour wrote.

"No, she did not. Her public concern about ‘fairness’ for female athletes starts and stops with the miniscule number of transgender women who are participating in sports."

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Armour accused Ponder of putting transgender people in further danger with her tweets "by further amplifying the bogeyman that cisgender women’s participation in sports is being threatened by transgender girls and young women."

Armour concluded that Ponder’s opinions have nothing to do with "fairness."

Sam Ponder talks

Sam Ponder promotes ESPN's "Sunday NFL Countdown." (David Buchan/Variety/Penske Media via Getty Images)

Earlier this month, a Washington Post-KFF poll showed that the majority of American adults believe gender is determined at birth and are against biological males competing in women’s sports.

Sixty-six percent of American adults do not believe that biological males should be allowed to compete in women’s sports competitions at the high school level, while 34% support biological males competing against women.

When it comes to college and professional sports, 65% of American adults don’t believe that biological males should be allowed to compete in women’s sports, while 34% in both categories were behind the idea.

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In youth sports, 62% of American adults did not believe biological males should be allowed to compete against biological girls, while 37% were behind allowing transgender girls to compete with biological girls.

Fox News’ Houston Keene contributed to this report.