Last night I had a massive argument with my partner about a 25-year-old female athlete, Caster Semenya.
The South African 800m runner has been thrust into the savage centre of a gender politics row playing out on the world stage. And she had made her way to our dinner table.
Semenya has done nothing wrong. Yet she is being treated worse than some doping athletes by people who believe the Olympian should not be allowed to compete with women due to certain intersex physiological traits normally associated with men.
She cruised to victory in the 800m first heat in Rio overnight, finishing in just under two minutes (1m59s), with viewers remarking she made it look like a warm-up.
There is no denying Semenya’s powerful physique. The sportswoman has a striking muscular frame. She also has testosterone levels three times higher than the usual level found in women.
But she is a woman. She was raised a woman. She identifies as a woman. And being intersex does not buy any athlete a one-way ticket to gold.
Top Comments
"And as things stand, Semenya's personal best is still two seconds off the world record (1m53s) set in 1983".
Set by Jarmila Kratochvilova of the Czech republic, ironically widely suspected of using anabolic steroids (mimicking testosterone) in her career.
https://www.youtube.com/wat...
From her physique, not hard to see why...
I agree with Fair and Square. Biologically she is not the same as the other women against whom she is competing. Men and women don't usually race each other in athletics because the differences in their hormones and muscles mean that it wouldn't be fair. I agree that she has worked hard, but you cannot escape the fact that she has a biological advantage which is more significant than long legs or other naturally occurring differences between athletes.