New Straits Times

India’s gender-row sprinter gets Asian Games chance

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HYDERABAD: Four years after she was forced out of the Asian Games in a row over her gender, Indian sprinter Dutee Chand said she was determined to make up for lost time as she finally gets her chance in Indonesia.

Dutee, affected by the same condition, hyperandro­genism, which has dogged the career of double Olympic champion Caster Semenya, fought and won a lengthy court battle to remain in the sport she loves.

Now the 22-year-old is hoping for a redemptive medal at her long-delayed Asian Games debut in Jakarta, where she also has her eye on lowering India’s 100m record for the second time in two months.

“I am just so happy. I missed the 2014 Asian Games due to the hyperandro­genism row, so it’s my chance to prove my worth,” Dutee, whose hero is Usain Bolt, said after a training session in Hyderabad.

“I hope my hard work pays off,” she said.

“I never thought of quitting. It’s always a dream for an athlete to represent their country and what happened was not my fault.”

It has been a difficult road for Dutee, who was born in rural poverty and suffered the psychologi­cal trauma of gender testing when she was just a teenager after showing elevated levels of testostero­ne in 2014.

After being diagnosed with hyperandro­genism, a condition which produces high testostero­ne levels, Dutee was barred from competing under the Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation’s rules at the time.

However, Dutee took her case to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport, which finally ruled in her favour earlier this year.

“We are six sisters as my mother had wanted a son but that did not happen. We were poor and even getting two meals was tough. So I took to sports to earn money and improve myself,” she said.

“I just wanted to run and had never heard of high testostero­ne and all that. So for those four years I was under tremendous mental pressure and could not concentrat­e on my training.

“I didn’t take drugs or anything of that sort, it’s all natural. All human bodies are different. Natural hormones cannot be reduced or increased. Finally people understood this and I won the case.”

This year, the IAAF changed their rules to target middle-distance runners, who include Caster, citing evidence that races between 400m and a mile had been most affected by women with high testostero­ne levels.

While South Africa’s athletics federation has pledged to challenge the ruling, Dutee is able to compete as she runs the 100 and 200m, thanks partly to another quirk of her physiology — shortsight­edness.

“I concentrat­e on 100m because I am short-sighted,” said Dutee, who originally ran longdistan­ce.

“My first coach retired in 2008 and the new coach said I can only train you for 100 and 200m. So I started running short distance and there has been no looking back,” she added.

At India’s Inter-State Championsh­ips in June, Dutee set a new national record of 11.29 sec, still some way off the long-standing Asian mark of 10.79 set by China’s Li Xuemei in 1997.

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