The Asian Age

Semenya sets sights on Tokyo

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Johannesbu­rg, March 14: Caster Semenya is looking for another Olympic run. A different one, too.

Banned from competing in her favorite race and defending her title, the Olympic 800-meter champion is trying to make the Tokyo Games anyway by switching to the 200 meters.

Semenya announced her decision on her Instagram account on Friday, saying her desire “to compete at the highest level of sport” drove her to try to qualify for the Olympics in an unfamiliar race for her.

“This decision has not been an easy one but, as always, I look forward to the challenge and will work hard, doing all I can to qualify for Tokyo and compete to the best of my ability for South Africa,” she said.

Under the world track and field body’s highly criticized testostero­ne regulation­s, Semenya and other female athletes with high natural testostero­ne are barred from races from 400 meters to one mile at top-level meets like the Olympics and world championsh­ips unless they undergo treatment to reduce their hormone levels for six months prior to running.

Semenya has refused to do so, calling the rules and the medical interventi­on required unfair and unethical. Athletes are given three choices to lower their testostero­ne: birth control pills, hormone-blocking injections or surgery.

But the regulation­s don’t apply to the 200 meters and that gives Semenya a chance to run at her third Olympics, even if it’s not in the race she wants to run in. It

South Africa’s Olympic champion Caster Semenya competes in the women’s 200m event during the Athletics Gauteng North Championsh­ips at the LC de Villiers Athletics Stadium in Pretoria on Friday. — AFP

won’t be easy.

Semenya has rarely run the 200 meters, and only at lower-level events. She didn’t compete at all over the distance between 2016 and early 2019, and she is well off the pace of the world’s leading women.

The 29-year-old South African needs to improve her personal best by nearly two seconds just to qualify for the Tokyo Olympics. Her best is 24.26 seconds, in South Africa in February 2019. The Olympic qualifying standard for the women’s 200 is 22.80 seconds.

Semenya’s PB wouldn’t have got her out of the heats at the 2016 Rio de Janeiro Olympics.

But at least Semenya has a goal now after being in limbo for nearly a year after making an unsuccessf­ul appeal of World Athletics’ testostero­ne regulation­s at the Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport last May.

That left Semenya with a choice: Submit to medical treatment to lower her testostero­ne or stay away from the 800 meters.

Defiant, she chose to stay away and hasn’t run an 800-meter race since winning at the Prefontain­e Classic in June last year, her 31st straight victory over two laps. She wasn’t able to defend her title at last year’s world championsh­ips.

Semenya’s decision to try the 200 may signal she has given up on her second legal challenge against the regulation­s. That second appeal is still being considered by the Swiss Federal Tribunal and a ruling is due in the coming weeks.

She lost her first appeal at CAS last year by a 2-1 majority of the panel of judges. A favorable decision from the Swiss supreme court could still overturn the testostero­ne rules and allow Semenya to compete in the 800 again without hormonered­ucing treatment, but her chances of winning the appeal are seen as slim.World Athletics’ new testostero­ne rules apply to female athletes like Semenya with conditions known as difference­s of sex developmen­ts (DSDs).

PTI

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