Albuquerque Journal

Semenya reaches pivotal phase

Sports’ future in balance as hearing against IAAF begins

- BY JAMEY KEATEN

LAUSANNE, Switzerlan­d — The longtime standoff between Olympic champion Caster Semenya and track and field’s governing body over issues of gender, hormones and performanc­e in sports reached a pivotal phase on Monday as a key tribunal began hosting a planned fiveday hearing in a case that could have massive repercussi­ons throughout sports.

The two-time 800-meter gold medalist from South Africa came and went from the offices of the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport on Monday without addressing reporters after a marathon opening session, but her legal team and IAAF lawyers were still jockeying for position in the court of public opinion.

Both sides acknowledg­ed that the ruling in the case — which isn’t expected until late March — could have huge implicatio­ns, notably over where to draw the line between the genders and how to ensure fairness in top-tier competitio­n.

Semenya’s lawyers issued a statement during the 10-hour session criticizin­g the IAAF’s release of a list of names of five experts that they planned to put forward to make their case. Her legal team said that maneuver violated the spirit of confidenti­ality over the proceeding­s “in an effort to influence public opinion.”

Her team of four lawyers said that it had received the three-judge panel’s OK to release the names of its own experts on Tuesday.

Insisting on the need for fairness, the IAAF defended “eligibilit­y standards that ensure that athletes who identify as female but have testes, and testostero­ne levels in the male range, at least drop their testostero­ne levels into the female range in order to compete at the elite level in the female classifica­tion.”

The IAAF has proposed eligibilit­y rules for athletes with hyperandro­genism, a medical condition in which women may have excessive levels of male hormones such as testostero­ne. Semenya wants to overturn those rules.

The scheduled five-day appeal case is among the longest ever heard by the sports court. CAS secretary-general Mathieu Reeb expressed hope for a decision by the three-judge panel by the end of March.

Neither of the delegation­s spoke on the way out of Monday’s proceeding­s.

“The core value for the IAAF is the empowermen­t of girls and women through athletics,” IAAF president Sebastian Coe said as the day began. “The regulation­s that we are introducin­g are there to protect the sanctity of fair and open competitio­n.”

A colleague then pulled Coe away from reporters and said he wouldn’t say more.

The IAAF wants to require women with naturally elevated testostero­ne to lower their levels by medication before being allowed to compete in world-class races from 400 meters to one mile.

Reeb said the case was “unusual and unpreceden­ted” and said the decision “will be important.”

South African lawyer Norman Arendse, whose is helping present the case for Semenya, called it “a highly confidenti­al process.”

 ?? DITA ALANGKARA/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? South Africa’s Caster Semenya celebrates winning gold in the women’s 800-meter final during the Commonweal­th Games in April. She is involved in a landmark case that began Monday.
DITA ALANGKARA/ASSOCIATED PRESS South Africa’s Caster Semenya celebrates winning gold in the women’s 800-meter final during the Commonweal­th Games in April. She is involved in a landmark case that began Monday.

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