Sun.Star Cagayan de Oro

MENDOZA..

‘I’m created by God’

- BY AL S. MENDOZA

I CAN’T seem to walk away from Caster Semenya and so, here we go again.

The chief argument of the Internatio­nal Alliance of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF) in Semenya’s case is that female runners with high testostero­ne have an unfair advantage in events

from 400 meters (m) to the mile.

After the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sports (CAS) upheld IAAF’s decision, the court also said that the rules must apply only up to the 800m because the evidence was not clear that women with hyperandro­genism (male tendencies) have an edge in the 1,500m and above.

The CAS decision will now require female athletes like Semenya with high testostero­ne (male sex hormones) to undergo blood tests to prove that they have complied before being allowed to race.

The landmark CAS rule came after Semenya won two Olympic gold medals in the 800m and a world championsh­ip plum— earning the ire of rivals left completely behind in the races ruled by the South African speedster.

Semenya, backed by the South African Sports Confederat­ion and Olympic Committee, seems bent on appealing to Switzerlan­d’s Supreme Court, saying: “The decision of the CAS will not hold me back.”

But historical­ly, the judges rarely overturn their decisions of the world sports court.

Semenya has an ally in Ross Tucker, a sports science consultant who boasts of a PhD in exercise physiology.

Tucker told AP’s Graham Dunbar: “The scientific evidence is insufficie­nt to justify the [new] rules... as a result of the court decision, other sports will essentiall­y copy the IAAF’s regulation­s.”

What is alarming is that hormone-blocking drugs such as testostero­ne-decreasing medicines can increase the risk of blood clots, thinning bones, fractures and heart problems.

As a teenager in 2009, Semenya, now 28, won her first world title in Berlin—after her gender was severely scrutinize­d by the IAAF.

Is Semenya another freak of nature?

Listen to Francine Niyonsaba of Burundi, Semenya’s rival with high testostero­ne, too: “I didn’t choose to be born like this. What am I? I’m created by God.”

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