Highly Bekelaselassie wrote:
The IAAF had ruled that she wasn't a biochemical female, and couldn't compete without T-desensitizing pharmaceuticals. The CAS ruling reversed this, but "as far as track and field (i.e. IAAF) is concerned", she is not a female unless undergoing medical treatment.
Metric Miler wrote:She isn't male as far as track and field is concerned. She is clearly competing in the female category following assessment by IAAF and IOC.
The reasons that you as an individual believe make her ineligible to compete as a female do not ring true with others. It is an opinion. The line is always arbitrary, we literally choose it. Sex isn't clear cut.
Scientifically, with regards to sport specifically, there is no clear reason why Caster cannot compete in the female category.
I'm not representing my opinion here by saying she should or shouldn't, but there is no scientifically proven reason that females with androgen hyperinsensitivity syndrome cannot compete against other females.
Not true. She triggered a false positive for T by having more testosterone than the level set out by anti-doping regulations. They wanted her to have less T than the anti-doping limit and so said she has to take drugs to level her hormonal balance to a point set out by WADA. Nothing to do with gender testing. All about drugs.
It has since been raised that there is NO evidence that shows that NATURALLY produced testosterone in women in Caster's condition leads to performance enhancing effects. The effects of synthetic testosterone being injected into normal females is well documented (and hence banned). But this matter is not strictly relevant, for medical reasons.