Hyperandrogenism / Caster Semenya & others

Kenya's Margaret Wambui won bronze and I have to say she looks more like a bloke than Semenya. I have no idea if she has had to undergo any specific tests.
I felt for Lynsey Sharp and the other girls, as they do not appear to be competing on a level playing field.
I wonder if there are enough women athletes with extremely high testosterone levels, who could compete in their own event, so that everyone gets to compete on more equal terms.
It's extremely difficult, as whatever action the IAAF take, someone is likely to be disadvantaged.
I have great sympathy for ALL the athletes.
https://www.newscientist.com/article/2101769-intersex-athlete-caster-semenya-rightly-free-to-run-at-rio/
http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/olympics/36691465
Comments
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There was a good debate on this on the BBC while they were waiting for the Mo Farah medal presentation.
Very difficult issue and no easy solution which, as Michael Johnson said, wouldn't disadvantage someone.0 -
Yes, I saw it this morning.Henry Irving said:There was a good debate on this on the BBC while they were waiting for the Mo Farah medal presentation.
Very difficult issue and no easy solution which, as Michael Johnson said, wouldn't disadvantage someone.0 -
It's a terribly hard decision to make, especially as there are suspicions about all 3 medalists. Curious that they were all in the same race.
It's been suggested that Semenya is almost trying not to run too fast, imagine the headlines if she broke the (incredibly suspicious) world record last night?0 -
Just to confirm, this was the Woman's final?6
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That first article you link surely answers your question. The Olympics are a nationalistic, elitist sham and excluding an athlete on this basis makes no sense given what passes for fairness elsewhere.4
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Is it anymore of an advantage than Phelps having a bigger lung capacity, longer 'wingspan' and double jointed arms, over other swimmers?18
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Do the successful men also have more testosterone? I'm sure there's some link to do with testosterone levels exposed to in the womb as well.1
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They are supposed to be nationalistic and elitist. That's the point. I went to my daughter's sports day where they all won, and frankly it was shit.Leuth said:That first article you link surely answers your question. The Olympics are a nationalistic, elitist sham and excluding an athlete on this basis makes no sense given what passes for fairness elsewhere.
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I know it's the point. That's why you can't discriminate on these grounds.3
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Read an interesting article the other day, I think in the New Scientist, talking about gene editting for sports - ignoring the gene aspect for now they talked about the disparity between Olympic disciplines.ValleyGary said:Is it anymore of an advantage than Phelps having a bigger lung capacity, longer 'wingspan' and double jointed arms, over other swimmers?
They used weight lifting and fighting (eg boxing & Taekwondo) as an example - in these sports the competitors are divided into weight categories, whereas in most of the other disciplines they are not. This is probably for historic reasons, but different body types are going to have advantages over others, Usain bolt is just so much bigger than most other sprinters, Phelps also has the advantages you mention.
No matter how hard people work they are likely never going to be as good as Phelps/Bolt etc. so is this fair, should things be changed to make things more of a level playing field like in the aforementioned sports? Imagine someone in the mens 105kg+ competing against a 56kg.
Has there ever been a case of someone having a sex change and then trying to compete as their new legal sex? Wouldn't this cause an issue - if Semenya having naturally higher testosterone levels causes such major issues for some, then surely if someone has a sex change that would be even harder for some to accept.
Interesting topic!
It'll be interesting to see how "gene-doping" goes over the next decade or so. The article I read made some good arguments for it, such as it making athletes much healthier in the long run. I'm not sure myself, but interesting times ahead.0 -
Drug-taking is in the Olympic spirit too. Athletes could be sponsored by pharmaceutical companies. It'd be the honest way.4
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Yeah, I reckon the high jump favours athletes around 6 foot or taller.
Heightest.
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I think there were some Soviet/communist "female" athletes who had sex changes. East Germany and Bulgaria ring a bell. Can't be bothered to google it.moutuakilla said:
Read an interesting article the other day, I think in the New Scientist, talking about gene editting for sports - ignoring the gene aspect for now they talked about the disparity between Olympic disciplines.ValleyGary said:Is it anymore of an advantage than Phelps having a bigger lung capacity, longer 'wingspan' and double jointed arms, over other swimmers?
They used weight lifting and fighting (eg boxing & Taekwondo) as an example - in these sports the competitors are divided into weight categories, whereas in most of the other disciplines they are not. This is probably for historic reasons, but different body types are going to have advantages over others, Usain bolt is just so much bigger than most other sprinters, Phelps also has the advantages you mention.
No matter how hard people work they are likely never going to be as good as Phelps/Bolt etc. so is this fair, should things be changed to make things more of a level playing field like in the aforementioned sports? Imagine someone in the mens 105kg+ competing against a 56kg.
Has there ever been a case of someone having a sex change and then trying to compete as their new legal sex? Wouldn't this cause an issue - if Semenya having naturally higher testosterone levels causes such major issues for some, then surely if someone has a sex change that would be even harder for some to accept.
Interesting topic!
It'll be interesting to see how "gene-doping" goes over the next decade or so. The article I read made some good arguments for it, such as it making athletes much healthier in the long run. I'm not sure myself, but interesting times ahead.0 -
Certainly one or two female Soviet athletes who ended up having sex changes, after they had retired, due to the effect of drugs taken whilst competing.McBobbin said:
I think there were some Soviet/communist "female" athletes who had sex changes. East Germany and Bulgaria ring a bell. Can't be bothered to google it.moutuakilla said:
Read an interesting article the other day, I think in the New Scientist, talking about gene editting for sports - ignoring the gene aspect for now they talked about the disparity between Olympic disciplines.ValleyGary said:Is it anymore of an advantage than Phelps having a bigger lung capacity, longer 'wingspan' and double jointed arms, over other swimmers?
They used weight lifting and fighting (eg boxing & Taekwondo) as an example - in these sports the competitors are divided into weight categories, whereas in most of the other disciplines they are not. This is probably for historic reasons, but different body types are going to have advantages over others, Usain bolt is just so much bigger than most other sprinters, Phelps also has the advantages you mention.
No matter how hard people work they are likely never going to be as good as Phelps/Bolt etc. so is this fair, should things be changed to make things more of a level playing field like in the aforementioned sports? Imagine someone in the mens 105kg+ competing against a 56kg.
Has there ever been a case of someone having a sex change and then trying to compete as their new legal sex? Wouldn't this cause an issue - if Semenya having naturally higher testosterone levels causes such major issues for some, then surely if someone has a sex change that would be even harder for some to accept.
Interesting topic!
It'll be interesting to see how "gene-doping" goes over the next decade or so. The article I read made some good arguments for it, such as it making athletes much healthier in the long run. I'm not sure myself, but interesting times ahead.0 -
Do you think we should do away with The Olympics ?Leuth said:That first article you link surely answers your question. The Olympics are a nationalistic, elitist sham and excluding an athlete on this basis makes no sense given what passes for fairness elsewhere.
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No. It's a nice way for niche sports to raise their profile. But we should definitely do away with pretending it has any importance beyond this.Covered End said:
Do you think we should do away with The Olympics ?Leuth said:That first article you link surely answers your question. The Olympics are a nationalistic, elitist sham and excluding an athlete on this basis makes no sense given what passes for fairness elsewhere.
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I don't think there is a perfect solution here and if you do nothing it can be deemed to be unfair and if you do something it can deemed to be unfair - but I would specify a maximum tesosterone level women's competitions.0
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Was gutted for poor Melissa Bishop the Canadian girl in 4th place, she gave a very raw interview on Canadian TV afterwards was very gracious but you could tell she was hurting - she missed out on bronze to Margaret Wambuikillerandflash said:It's a terribly hard decision to make, especially as there are suspicions about all 3 medalists. Curious that they were all in the same race.
It's been suggested that Semenya is almost trying not to run too fast, imagine the headlines if she broke the (incredibly suspicious) world record last night?0 -
And if a woman had a natural level above your arbitrary maximum, she'd be banned from competing?MuttleyCAFC said:I don't think there is a perfect solution here and if you do nothing it can be deemed to be unfair and if you do something it can deemed to be unfair - but I would specify a maximum tesosterone level women's competitions.
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Quite a few transgender sportswoman, most famous are probably Rennee Richards in Tennis, Fallon fox in mma, Mianne bagger in golf.0
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No, she would have to supress it medically. Not ideal but the best option of a bad lot.0
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So, she'd be prevented from competing until she'd taken performance-altering drugs?MuttleyCAFC said:No, she would have to supress it medically. Not ideal but the best option of a bad lot.
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It's a mess. Not sure that any solution will be fair.1
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I think I have made it clear that this is not an ideal situation but yes. If she wants to compete with women that is. If she wants to compete with men, she doesn't have to do anything. She has tesosterone levels that mean she should be able to compete with men after all.0
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Sssooooooooooo
Would ya?4 -
I would never say she was anything else but a woman - that would be disrespectful. I would impose a requirement to compete in women's competitions.0
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So, let me get this clear. You'd have two types of events. One for women, some of whom you'd insist take drugs. And one for men and women.MuttleyCAFC said:I think I have made it clear that this is not an ideal situation but yes. If she wants to compete with women that is. If she wants to compete with men, she doesn't have to do anything. She has tesosterone levels that mean she should be able to compete with men after all.
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Some of the most ridiculous names I've ever heardAll_Thaid_Up said:Quite a few transgender sportswoman, most famous are probably Rennee Richards in Tennis, Fallon fox in mma, Mianne bagger in golf.
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She is a woman who has a condition that makes her better than her competitors. Probably grew up getting ripped to shreds by her classmates and now is the Olympic champion. Good for her. If they consider her to have an unfair advantage then its frankly unbelievable.
I want to play in the nba but all the other guys have an advantage in being 7ft. I wanted to be a swimmer but my size 9 feet couldn't paddle fast enough. I wanted to win the national but I'm not a horse. The only thing I was good at was whaling and that was by stripping off and infiltrating the pod. They've now banned that so tough shit on me.
At what point do we draw the line on what is acceptable? Kids or adults are pushed in to sports based on what they are. Even in isolation football had the same rules. The fat kid plays centre back, the fast kid upfront, the manager's son is captain. Are we going to start moaning about every advantage someone has over their competitors when they are using whatever they were born with.19