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PARIS: Barring South African runner Caster Semenya from competitio­n due to naturally high testostero­ne levels would be like excluding basketball players because they are too tall, experts commented Thursday, as the top sports court said it was delaying a ruling.

Having unusually elevated levels of the hormone -- known to boost muscle strength and bone mass -- is not enough to make a world-class athlete like double Olympic champion Semenya, who has dominated the women's 800 metres over the last decade, they argued.

The record for that distance was set in 1983 by a Czech runner Jarmila Kratochvil­ova, who has long been dogged by accusation­s of doping.

"To become a great athlete requires at least 10,000 hours of training, focus, discipline, timing, coaching, equipment, and strategy," lead author Cara Tannenbaum, scientific director of the Institute of Gender and Health at the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, told AFP.

"If we exclude women who have high testostero­ne levels from track events, will we then decide to exclude men who are extraordin­arily tall from playing basketball?" she asked rhetorical­ly.

"It would be unscientif­ic to make decisions on exclusion for men or women based on a single genetic factor alone."

The Internatio­nal Associatio­n of Athletics Federation­s (IAAF) is seeking to force so-called "hyperandro­genic" athletes or those with "difference­s of sexual developmen­t" (DSD) to seek treatment to lower their testostero­ne levels below a prescribed amount if they wish to continue competing as women.

The Court of Arbitratio­n for Sport is set to rule on capping testostero­ne levels in women athletes at five nanomoles per litre (nmol/L) of blood. On Thursday, the court put back the likely date of its decision "until the end of April" because both sides had filed additional material since the hearing in February.

"No precise date has been set," said a CAS press release.

In non-athletes, testostero­ne concentrat­ions typically range between 9 and 31 nmol/L for boys and men, and from 0.4 to 2 nmol/L in girls and women, Tannenbaum noted.

But at least one study of elite track and field athletes tested after competitio­n showed a far smaller gap -- and even some overlap -- between women and men, she pointed out.

For this and other reasons, setting a limit of 5 nmol/L was "arbitrary" and discrimina­tory, she wrote in the BMJ, a medical journal.

On Thursday, the IAAF responded to the delay by saying it was introducin­g a provision allowing those who "respect the limit of 5 nmol/L, as of the week following the publicatio­n of the decision" to be eligible for the athletics World Championsh­ips which start in Doha on September 28.

Semenya's testostero­ne levels are not publically known.

But from 2011 to 2015, she took hormone suppressan­ts to bring her below a 10 nmol/L limit imposed during those years, and would clearly need to do the same if the lower threshold were validated.

During that five-year period, her best times in the 800m were a second or two slower than before and after.

Responding to Tannenbaum's editorial, the IAAF insisted that the 5 nmol/L limit "is not 'arbitrary'".

"Rather, it is based on a comprehens­ive survey of all reliable reported data," athletics' governing body told AFP.

In 2017, the British Journal of Sports Medicine study -commission­ed by the IAAF -showed that women with higher testostero­ne levels turned in marginally better performanc­es in the hammer throw, the pole vault, the 400m hurdles, as well as the 400m and 800m events.

Other experts support the IAAF ruling, saying it is justified on biological grounds.

"A profound increase in testostero­ne levels (at puberty) mediates not only male genital developmen­t but also greater muscle strength and skeletal growth compared with the female which is long lasting into young adulthood," said Ieuan Hughes, a paediatric endocrinol­ogist and emeritus professor at the University of Cambridge.

These are impacts "which sports physiologi­sts recognise to be advantageo­us in highly competitiv­e events," he said in written comment.

Hughes challenged the accuracy of the study cited by Tannenbaum showing a malefemale overlap in testostero­ne levels among top-level athletes, chalking up the results to "outliers".

"Even the lowest testostero­ne value in men is four to five times greater than the highest value in the female range," he said.

Chris Cooper, an emeritus professor of biochemist­ry in the School of Sport, Rehabilita­tion and Exercise Sciences at the University of Essex, suggested "the current evidence is as good as we are going to get that both natural and doped testostero­ne levels enhance female sports performanc­e".

Cooper pointed out that a "special protected space for female sport" exists because there would otherwise be "no female winners" in most events.

Whether the IAAF rule is fair or "ethically right", however, is a separate question, he suggested.

No matter how the CAS decide, a subset of women athletes will no doubt decry the decision as unjust.

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