History-maker Hubbard says not a transgender icon, but an athlete
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[August 03, 2021]
By Martin Petty
TOKYO (Reuters) -The first openly transgender Olympian said on
Tuesday she would retire from weightlifting and felt her landmark
appearance at the Tokyo Games should be fast forgotten as sport
takes greater strides to be more inclusive.
New Zealand's Laurel Hubbard, 43, said she had never sought
publicity, nor regards herself a role model or trailblazer, but just
wants to be treated like any other athlete on sport's biggest stage.
"I don't think it should be historic. I think as we move into a new
and more understanding world, people are starting to realise that
people like me are just people," Hubbard said of her participation
in Tokyo, which was among the most contentious issues ahead of the
Olympics.
"We are human and, as such, I hope that just being here is enough,"
she said in a rare interview with international media.
"All I have ever wanted as an athlete is to be regarded as an
athlete."
The soft-spoken, media-shy Hubbard made an unexpected early exit on
Monday https://www.reuters.com/lifestyle/
sports/weightlifting-nzs-hubbard-
becomes-first-transgender-olympian-
exits-early-2021-08-02, eliminated 10 minutes into her +87kg contest
after failures in her opening three lifts.
Hubbard, who was born male and transitioned eight years ago, competed in
Tokyo under the rules of a 2015 International Olympic Committee (IOC)
consensus on trans athletes. The IOC is currently reviewing those
guidelines.
Her participation has stoked a huge debate https://www.reuters.com/
lifestyle/sports/transgender-weightlifter-becomes-focus-inclusion-vs-fairness-debate-2021-08-01
on whether being more inclusive towards transgender women athletes means
disadvantaging those born as women.
The IOC's critics argue transgender athletes have an edge in skeletal
and muscular development from being born male and say rules allowing
trans athletes to contest women's events could be abused by countries
seeking to win more Olympic medals.
'SMALL STEP'
Advocates for trans athletes dismiss that as extremely unlikely, saying
hormone therapy during transition negates perceived performance
advantages.
Hubbard, who was twice the age of her competitors, said she was
considering retiring because age had caught up with her and
weightlifting had taken a physical toll.
[to top of second column] |
Laurel Hubbard of New Zealand in action.
REUTERS/Edgard Garrido
"What I hope is, if I am in a position
to look back, that this will just be a small part of history, just a
small step," Hubbard said.
"I really hope that with time, any
significance to this occasion is diminished by things to come."
She said she was no icon for trans athletes.
"I hope that just by being here, I can provide some sense of
encouragement," she said.
"I just hope that different people who are undergoing any difficulty
or struggle ... that they can perhaps see that there are
opportunities in the world. There are opportunities to live
authentically, and as we are."
Save Women's Sport Australasia, which has urged more scientific
study and regulations on transgender athletes, said the IOC had been
rash in determining that biological males who identify as women
could compete in women's sports.
"It feels quite wrong that New Zealander Laurel Hubbard has borne
the brunt of what is quite obviously a flawed policy," it said in a
statement.
Hubbard applauded the IOC for being courageous but agreed more
conversation and studies were necessary.
She believes the negative attention on her was based on emotion
rather than principles and that people were reacting out of fear.
"I tried not to dwell on negative coverage or perception because it
makes a hard job even harder," she said.
"It's hard enough lifting a barbell. But if you're putting more
weight on it, it makes it an impossible task really."
(Reporting by Martin Petty; Editing by Michael Perry and Karishma
Singh)
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