The Malta Independent on Sunday

Semenya misses Tokyo, may be forced out of Olympics for good

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This could be it for Caster Semenya and the Olympics.

Forced out of her favorite race by World Athletics' testostero­ne rules, the two-time Olympic champion in the 800 meters took a late shot at qualifying for Tokyo in the 5,000 meters, an event not affected by the hormone regulation­s. She came up short.

Now 30, Semenya's hopes of making it back to the Olympics are dwindling.

The South African once said she wanted to run at top track events until she was 40. Now, her future ambitions depend on a final, longshot legal appeal of the testostero­ne rules or transformi­ng from the world's dominant middle-distance runner into a successful long-distance athlete. That's going to be hard for her.

Semenya is the athlete that has perhaps stoked the most controvers­y in track and field over the last decade. If there are no more appearance­s on the biggest stage, it's been a career like no other. In 12 years at the top, Semenya has won two Olympic golds and three world championsh­ip titles, but her success has come amid nearconsta­nt interferen­ce by track authoritie­s. She has only competed free of restrictio­ns of one type or another for three of those 12 years.

WHY CAN'T SEMENYA DEFEND HER 800 TITLE IN TOKYO?

In 2018, world track and field's governing body introduced rules it said were aimed at female athletes with conditions called difference­s of sex developmen­t, or DSDs. The key for World Athletics is that these athletes have testostero­ne levels that are higher than the typical female range. The track body argues that gives them an unfair advantage. Semenya is the highest-profile athlete affected by the regulation­s, but not the only one.

The rules demand that Semenya lower her testostero­ne levels artificial­ly — by either taking birth control pills daily, having hormone-blocking injections or undergoing surgery — to be allowed to run in races from 400 meters to one mile. Semenya has simply refused to do that, pointing out the irony that in a sport where doping is such a scourge, authoritie­s want her to take drugs to be eligible to run at the Olympics.

"Why will I take drugs?" Semenya said in 2019. "I'm a pure athlete. I don't cheat. They should focus on doping, not us."

BUT SHE CAN RUN THE 5,000?

Yes. Strangely, World Athletics decided to only enforce the testostero­ne rules for track events from 400 meters to one mile, raising criticism from Semenya's camp that the regulation­s were specifical­ly designed to target her because of her dominance. It means Semenya can compete in the 100 and 200 meters and long-distance races without lowering her testostero­ne levels. Field events are also unregulate­d. After a brief go at 200 meters, Semenya attempted to qualify for

Tokyo in the 5,000 meters, running races in Pretoria and Durban in South Africa and, most recently, at internatio­nal meets in

Germany and Belgium last month. She never came within 20 seconds of the Olympic qualifying mark.

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