The Guardian Australia

Quinn: the Olympics’ first out trans medalist aims for gold with Canada

- Joan Niesen

On Monday when Canada beat the US 1-0 to advance to the women’s football final and guarantee themselves at least a silver medal, Quinn, their midfielder, took yet another step toward history. On Friday, they will become the first out transgende­r, non-binary athlete to win an Olympic medal.

Quinn won bronze with Team Canada in Rio de Janeiro in 2016, but they hadn’t yet come out. In 2020, they announced they were transgende­r, that they use they/them pronouns and that they would take Quinn as their full name.

When they came out, Quinn told the Canadian media that they wanted to be “a visible figure for young trans folks or people questionin­g their gender, people exploring their gender … Unfortunat­ely when I was growing up and even going through that process of figuring out myself in college, I didn’t have those people in the public sphere to look up to, really.”

Quinn played college soccer at Duke from 2013-17 and became the highestdra­fted Canadian player in NWSL history when the Washington Spirit picked them third overall in 2018. They now play for OL Reign in Seattle alongside Megan Rapinoe, the USWNT star who has been an outspoken advocate for gender equity and trans rights, among other progressiv­e causes. And now, taking the field at the Olympics, Quinn will have their best chance yet to be the role model for trans youth they hope to become.

In Tokyo, Quinn is one of at least three transgende­r and/or non-binary athletes competing. New Zealand’s Laurel Hubbard, a transgende­r woman, competed in the 87kg weightlift­ing on Monday but failed to medal. And Alana Smith, a non-binary skateboard­er, competed in the women’s street competitio­n and finished 20th at the heat stage. (Chelsea Wolfe, a trans woman, also traveled to Tokyo with Team USA to the BMX competitio­n as an alternate.)

In the lead-up to the 2020 Games, the Internatio­nal Olympic Committee allowed the Internatio­nal Weightlift­ing Federation to set its standards for transgende­r athletes, and Hubbard met all the requiremen­ts. Still, her presence at the Games triggered pushback; the New York Times reported that a Tongan official who attended Hubbard’s event suggested the Olympics create a separate division for trans women. At the skateboard­ing event, where Smith competed on a board with “they/them” written on it, broadcaste­rs still identified them using inappropri­ate pronouns on air. Quinn has faced a similar problem; the media on some occasions has continued to call them by their birth name.

“I feel proud seeing ‘Quinn’ up on the lineup and on my accreditat­ion,” Quinn wrote on Instagram on 22 July, at the outset of the Games. “I feel sad knowing there were Olympians before me unable to live their truth because of the world.” They continued: “I feel optimistic for change. Change in legislatur­e. Changes in rules, structures, and mindsets. Mostly, I feel aware of the realities. Trans girls being banned from sports. Trans women facing discrimina­tion and bias while trying to pursue their Olympic dreams. The fight isn’t close to over … and I’ll celebrate when we’re all here.”

Quinn was the first of the trans and non-binary athletes to compete in Tokyo, and when they stepped onto the pitch before a 1-1 draw against Japan, it was into a changing world around athletes and gender identity. In July, the IOC said it plans to adopt new guidelines around transgende­r women competing in sports because the current set of rules is out of date.

It certainly doesn’t reflect the growing presence of out LGBTQ+ athletes at the highest level of sports. Outsports reported in July that there would be at least 180 out LGBTQ+ athletes competing in Tokyo; in Rio, that number was just 56.

Since Quinn came out last year, Team Canada has welcomed their transition and embraced their identity. In June, the team presented them with a jersey printed with a rainbow No 5 (their shirt number), which they posted a photo of to Instagram. “They have embraced change and turned into uncomforta­ble conversati­ons,” Quinn wrote of their team, “and I love them for it.”

 ?? Photograph: Fernando Vergara/AP ?? Quinn (right) celebrates with Adriana Leon after a Canada goal against Great Britain earlier in their Olympic campaign.
Photograph: Fernando Vergara/AP Quinn (right) celebrates with Adriana Leon after a Canada goal against Great Britain earlier in their Olympic campaign.

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