Daily Dispatch

Semenya to star in Paris

Must put her run-in with IAAF aside

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CASTER Semenya will bid to put her run-in with the IAAF over controvers­ial new rules on testostero­ne behind her when she makes her Paris debut today in the seventh leg of the Diamond League.

Semenya is unbeaten over the 800m since her eliminatio­n in the semifinals of the 2015 worlds in Beijing.

She has run the fastest time of the season, clocking 1min 55.92sec in Eugene, but she will have to better her own personal best by 0.19sec should she aim for the meet record of 1:54.97, held since 2008 by the Kenyan Pamela Jelimo.

Semenya, double Olympic champion (2012, 2016) and twice world champion (2009, 2017), faces some tough competitio­n in the shape of American Ajee Wilson, Burundi’s Olympic silver medallist and reigning world champ Francine Nyonsaba, Ethiopian Habitam Alemu and Kenyan Margaret Wambui, bronze medallist at the Rio Games in 2016.

Off the track, Semenya has turned to the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport (CAS) in her challenge of IAAF rules on testostero­ne occurring in female athletes that are to be introduced on November 1.

The powerfully-built Semenya is potentiall­y the highest-profile female athlete that would be regulation­s.

Classified as “hyper-androgynou­s“, athletes like Semenya would have to chemically lower their testostero­ne levels to be able to compete, something the 800m runner says is discrimina­tory and in violation of the IAAF’s Constituti­on and the Olympic Charter.

“We will support our athletes on the grounds that the regulation­s discrimina­te against certain female athletes on the basis of natural physical characteri­stics and/or sex,” Athletics South Africa head Aleck Skhosana said after a meeting with IAAF president Sebastian Coe in London on Tuesday.

Semenya is just one high-profile athlete at what promises to be a highqualit­y meet at Stade Charlety in southern Paris.

Home favourite Renaud Lavillenie tops the pole vault list this season, with a 5.95m in April.

But hot on his heels are the Swedish prodigy Armand Duplantis, the 18year-old going over at 5.93m in May – a new junior world record – and American world champion Sam Kendricks, Canadian Shawn Barber (5.92m in 2018), Poles Piotr Lisek and Pawel Wojciechow­ski, and Brazilian Thiago Braz, reigning Olympic champion.

One of the stars to have emerged this season is undoubtedl­y naturalise­d Qatari 400m hurdler Abderrahma­n Samba. — affected by such

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