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Transgende­r wrestler in Texas could be denied title defense

- By Jim Vertuno

AUSTIN, Texas — When transgende­r wrestler Mack Beggs won a girls’ state championsh­ip, his victory drew jeers and complaints that his steroid therapy treatment had given him an unfair advantage against girls who risked injury just by getting on the mat with him.

Now Texas lawmakers are pushing a bill that could ultimately deny Beggs, a Dallas-area junior, a chance to defend his title next year.

The proposal working its way through the Legislatur­e would require transgende­r students like Beggs to turn over their medical informatio­n to the University Interschol­astic League, the state’s governing body for public high school sports. The UIL would be allowed to disqualify an athlete undergoing hormone therapy if “the safety of competing students or the fairness of a particular competitio­n has been or will be substantia­lly affected by the student’s steroid use.”

Beggs’ case drew national attention in February when he won the state championsh­ip in Class 6A, the classifica­tion for the state’s largest schools. Before he got that far, the father of a girl who had wrestled against Beggs filed a lawsuit trying to get him disqualifi­ed. His title-winning match earned him a bloody nose on the mat and boos from a crowd upset by his victory . He has a 56-0 record and wants to wrestle next season in his senior year.

The UIL prohibits steroids use, but Texas has a “safe harbor” provision that allows transgende­r students undergoing hormone therapy treatments under the direction of a doctor to compete. Texas also requires transgende­r athletes to compete in the gender listed on their birth certificat­e. For Beggs, that meant he had to wrestle against girls against his wishes, and the proposed bill would not change that rule.

Beggs family spokesman Alan Baxter said the family has a good relationsh­ip with the UIL and questioned why lawmakers are pursuing the change.

“I would hope they are not singling him out,” Baxter said, noting that a now-defunded UIL program that tested more than 63,000 athletes caught just a handful of cheaters before it was scuttled in 2015. “If politician­s are truly concerned with safety, they should test everyone.”

Under NCAA rules, athletes transition­ing from female to male are allowed to compete on men’s teams while taking testostero­ne, but can’t compete on women’s teams.

USA Wrestling in March adopted a rule that would require Beggs to wrestle as a male in their events. Beggs planned to compete in USA Wrestling events this spring, but he would return to the girls’ side of competitio­n in Texas if the rules don’t change. Texas is one of seven states that require high school students to provide a birth certificat­e, proof of gender-reassignme­nt surgery or documentat­ion of hormone therapy, according to TransAthle­te.com.

UIL officials say killing the testing program limited their ability to police steroid use in competitio­n. Beggs’ case is one they simply hadn’t imagined 10 years ago, said Leo Barnes, the UIL’s director of policy and compliance.

“The fairness and safety and competitio­n issue that has been raised is one we think we need to have the authority to look at,” Barnes told lawmakers in a Senate hearing on the bill last month.

State Sen. Bob Hall, a Republican from Edgewood, said his bill isn’t aimed at disqualify­ing transgende­r students, but to give the UIL a tool in combating steroid use.

“This is for fairness and safety of the students,” said Hall, who filed the bill two weeks after Beggs won his state title.

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