The Borneo Post

Irish Rugby bans transgende­r players from women’s game

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LONDON: Irish Rugby announced on Wednesday that transgende­r players will be barred from competing in women’s matches for the forthcomin­g campaign, falling in line with the latest guidelines from World Rugby.

From this season only players registered as female at birth will be allowed to play contact rugby in the women’s game.

According to World Rugby’s guidelines transgende­r women have been excluded from women’s rugby due to the “size, force- and power-producing advantages conferred by testostero­ne during puberty and adolescenc­e, and the resultant player welfare risks this creates.”

Last month, both English rugby union and rugby league banned transgende­r players on safety grounds.

“Recent peer reviewed research provides evidence that there are physical difference­s between those people whose sex was assigned as male and those as female at birth, and advantages in strength, stamina and physique brought about by male puberty are significan­t and retained even after testostero­ne suppressio­n,” the Irish Rugby Football Union (IRFU) said in a statement.

“The IRFU is keenly aware that this is a sensitive and challengin­g area for those involved and the wider LGBT+ community and will continue to work with those impacted, providing support to ensure their ongoing involvemen­t with the game.”

The change of rules will affect just two registered players in Ireland, who the IRFU said they have contacted to offer alternativ­e ways to remain active in the game such as noncontact forms of play, refereeing and coaching.

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