The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Portrait of a VERY modern bike race

Trans women who used to compete as men come f irst and second in new ‘non-binary’ event – leaving young mother in third place

- By Georgia Edkins WHITEHALL CORRESPOND­ENT

AN ‘INCLUSIVE’ cycling race that saw maleborn trans athletes trounce women competitor­s has been condemned by critics.

The event on Friday finished with two transgende­r women in first and second places, with a young mother in third.

Gold in the ThunderCri­t race at Herne Hill velodrome in South-East London went to Emily Bridges, a trans cyclist who was barred from a women’s race in March and who had competed in men’s events only the month before.

In second place was Lilly Chant who, despite identifyin­g as a woman, is still designated as male on official records.

The tournament’s best-performing biological woman, Jo Smith, of Thanet, Kent, won bronze and celebrated with her rivals by posing on the winners’ podium with her young daughter.

A photograph quickly spread on social media, sparking fury from female athletes and campaigner­s.

British Cycling, the governing body that has recently found itself embroiled in the controvers­y around trans competitor­s, said the event was independen­t and it had not been involved.

Sharron Davies, who won a swimming silver at the Moscow Olympics in 1980 and has spoken

‘Male puberty confers a lifelong advantage that cannot be undone’

out before on trans athletes, said she was ‘very disappoint­ed’ at news of the race.

Fiona McAnena, director of sport campaigns at Fair Play For Women, said: ‘It’s inevitable that if we’re going to allow people who have been through male puberty into the category that is supposed to be for females, those people are going to outperform.’

She added: ‘Sport is based on your body, and we have a female category in most sports because male puberty confers such an advantage and it is a lifelong advantage. It cannot be undone.’

In an attempt to devise an ‘inclusive’ event, the ThunderCri­t organisers created two new non-binary races called ‘thunder’ and ‘lightning’.

Its website said: ‘Thunder category is for cis men, non-binary people whose physical performanc­e aligns most with cis-men, trans men and women whose physical performanc­e aligns most closely with cis-men. Lightning category is for cis-women, nonbinary people whose physical performanc­e aligns with cis-women and trans men and women whose physical performanc­e aligns most closely with cis-women.’

Cis – or cisgender – describes a person who still identifies as the gender they were born as.

Non-binary refers to people who say they are not solely male or female.

Bridges and Chant competed in the lightning race, despite Bridges being barred by British Cycling from racing against five-times Olympic gold medallist Dame Laura Kenny in March after internatio­nal sporting bodies claimed she was ineligible.

British Cycling is now undertakin­g a review of its policy on transgende­r competitor­s.

 ?? ?? VICTORY KISS: Emily Bridges, centre, and Lilly Chant, left, with Jo Smith on the podium
VICTORY KISS: Emily Bridges, centre, and Lilly Chant, left, with Jo Smith on the podium

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