For the first time in a long time, champion runner Caster Semenya heads into the athletics world championships with virtually no chance to win.
Key points:
Semenya won two Olympic gold medals, two Commonwealth Games gold, and three world titles from 2009-18
Rules preventing women with higher levels of testosterone from running in middle-distance races were introduced in 2019
Semenya has never medalled in a distance longer than 1,500m at a major meet
On Thursday morning (AEST), the 31-year-old three-time world champion at 800 metres will run instead in the 5,000m race.
She is not considered a serious medal contender and it is the first time since she started dominating her favourite distance, well over a decade ago, that anybody has said that.
The South African chose to run in a race she does not prefer because she declined to submit to rules in track and field that demand she take hormone-reducing treatments if she wants to enter the 800m.
They are rules that Semenya, in a statement through her lawyer, called “an affront to the spirit of the sport”.
Semenya was assigned female at birth, was raised as a girl and identifies as a woman.
She is not transgender but her case, and those involving others who have similar intersex conditions, carry strong implications for how transgender athletes are treated and classified.
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