Semenya to run in Doha as storm rages over new IAAF rules
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[May 02, 2019]
By Nick Said
CAPE TOWN (Reuters) - Double Olympic
champion Caster Semenya will run her last 800-metres on Friday
before the International Association of Athletics Federations
imposes hugely controversial new rules limiting testosterone in
female athletes.
Semenya, who has spent years trying to get the new IAAF regulations
thrown out, will compete at the Diamond League meeting in Doha
against 2016 Olympic silver medallist Francine Niyonsaba - who
recently revealed she had similar difference in sexual development (DSD)
characteristics to the South African.
Both must then begin taking medication to lower their testosterone
levels if they wish to compete over that distance based on the new
rules, which the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) said on
Wednesday were necessary to ensure fair competition.
IAAF president Sebastian Coe, speaking in Doha on Thursday, said he
was grateful to CAS for the verdict.
"It is very straightforward for any association in sport," Coe told
a media briefing.
"Athletics has two classifications - it has age and it has gender.
We are fiercely protective of both. We are really grateful that CAS
has upheld that principle."
Coe refused to take more questions, but the case is likely to have
far-reaching consequences for women's sport, and has split opinion
around the globe.
Athletics South Africa likened the new IAAF regulations to
apartheid, and both it and Semenya's lawyers have said they could
contest the CAS ruling dismissing her appeal against their
introduction.
Under the rules to take effect on May 8, female athletes with high
natural levels of testosterone wishing to compete in events from
400-metres to a mile must medically limit that level to under 5 nmol/L,
which is double the normal female range of below 2 nmol/L.
Testosterone increases muscle mass, strength and haemoglobin, which
affects endurance. Some competitors have said women with higher
levels of the hormone have an unfair advantage.
Barring further legal action, Semenya finds herself at a crossroads:
Either she submits to the regulations or looks to compete in longer
distances.
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South Africa's Caster Semenya celebrates winning the Women's 800m
REUTERS/Eric Gaillard
She claimed the 5,000-metres title at the South African Athletics
Championships last week, an event not covered by the IAAF
regulations, but in a modest time of 16:05.97, well below the
qualifying standard for the world championships of 15:22.00.
This potential lifeline means Semenya may not abandon the 800-metres
yet, though any advance to the Swiss Federal Tribunal could take
months to reach a verdict and leave her career in limbo.
Former sprinter Michael Johnson, who won four Olympic gold medals
between 1992 and 2000, believes the regulations are right for
women's athletics.
"It was always going to be a difficult situation because through no
fault of her own she just happens to have this condition," Johnson
told Reuters.
"The IAAF has to make a decision on the line that's drawn between
the female races and the men's races. I think the decision was based
on the fairness of sports, so that there is a level playing field
for all of the athletes in any given race."
Semenya, 28, has vowed to fight on, whichever distance she races in.
"I know that the IAAF's regulations have always targeted me
specifically," she said in a statement released via her lawyers on
Wednesday.
"For a decade the IAAF has tried to slow me down, but this has
actually made me stronger. The decision of the CAS will not hold me
back. I will once again rise above and continue to inspire young
women and athletes in South Africa and around the world."
Her personal best of 1:54.25 in the 800-metres will make her the
quickest in the field in Doha’s Diamond League meet, the first time
she will compete over the distance in 2019.
(Reporting by Nick Said; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
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