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Transgender players banned from international women’s cricket by ICC

www.theguardian.com Transgender players banned from international women’s cricket by ICC

Transgender players who have been through male puberty will not be permitted to play international women’s cricket under new ICC gender eligibility regulations

Transgender players banned from international women’s cricket by ICC

The International Cricket Council has become the latest sports body to ban transgender players from the elite women’s game if they have gone through male puberty.

The ICC said it had taken the decision, following an extensive scientific review and nine-month consultation, to “protect the integrity of the international women’s game and the safety of players”.

It joins rugby union, swimming, cycling, athletics and rugby league, who have all gone down a similar path in recent years after citing concerns over fairness or safety.

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  • Sport is about competition and women who have not gone through male puberty cannot compete with women who have on an even playing field. The argument that all sport is unfair to some extent due to biological differences between different people in the same sex is sometimes deployed in bad faith as an argument for why trans athletes should be able to partiticpate in whatever competition they want.

    Yes, there are some people who are intersex but world athletics have a solution for this in terms of analysing testosterone levels in atheletes, and excluding people who are not beginning from the same baseline. It must be traumatic for these people but womens' sports are only just beginning to get the mainstream audiences to rival mens' sports and anything that casts aspersions on the legitimacy of the sport needs to be clearly regulated so that the work of pioneers like Billy Jean King are not invalidated.

    • As someone who is not an athlete and not really interested in sports as a spectator either, I've used arguments like that before in good faith. Why is it a problem? Most people never get the chance to compete at a high level in any kind of athletics, full stop. Participants at the highest level are all, necessarily, exceptional individuals.

      Can you help me understand what makes that particular exception to be so important? Why would women who have undergone one puberty or the other cast aspersions? Like you said, there are methods like testing hormone levels to ensure a level playing field. Given that, it seems like the only aspersions to be cast would be that their history somehow makes them less of a woman, which I can't agree with.

      • I can't speak for everyone but ime when people use the argument they are often more interested equality or inclusion at all costs. Their good intentions blind them to the fact that womens' sport has spent centuries trying go gain validity / parity with mens' sport.

      • Participants at the highest level are all, necessarily, exceptional individuals.

        Bullshit. High level athletes, artists, chefs, etc. aren't exceptional by god-given talent, but by relentless pursuit of that skill. Some of the best football (soccer) players of all time had unwanted physical builds or even small "defects". Some of the best volleyball players were way shorter than their peers. The problem with having trans women competing on the same field as cis women in most sports is that the biological advantage they might get far surpasses the most rigorous training they could do, i.e. it becomes about genetic makeup.

        • The problem with having trans women competing on the same field as cis women in most sports is that the biological advantage they might get far surpasses the most rigorous training they could do, i.e. it becomes about genetic makeup.

          The implication of this is that a trans woman who hasn't devoted her life to the sport will be able to compete at the highest levels. I think that is patently wrong. Most trans women, like most other women, would never have a chance at that without having devoted their lives.

          On top of that, many women (and likely trans women though I can't say for sure) do devote their lives to a sport but still never make it to the highest levels of competition. It's obviously not just about "god-given talent" as you said, but exceptional circumstances are a necessary condition. Not necessarily in the same way and the same set of conditions for every athlete, but every top-level performer is, necessarily, exceptional.

          • The implication of this is that a trans woman who hasn’t devoted her life to the sport will be able to compete at the highest levels

            There's no such implication. They'd still have to train, but there'd be an inherent advantage. A common example used to justify the division of sports between male and female categories is grip strength – the female world record is ~65kg, whereas the male average is ~50kg. A trans woman who underwent male puberty would have an unfair advantage, on average.

            • A common example used to justify the division of sports between male and female categories is grip strength – the female world record is ~65kg, whereas the male average is ~50kg.

              I've seen this statistic before in this context. What I hadn't seen (despite trying to find it) is any data on trans women's grip strength, or how well grip strength correlates to athletic ability. I don't disagree that trans women have had different life circumstances than cis women, and that those circumstances likely give them an advantage in many different sports. What I don't think follows from that is this advantage being an unfair advantage, especially since every top level athlete has advantages (inherent and otherwise) that have led them to their position.

              As I understand it, "male puberty" does confer some definite athletic advantages, but hormone therapy and other processes undergone by trans women largely mitigate those advantages. What I can't say (and haven't seen discussed scientifically or otherwise) is whether or to what degree those advantages remain "unfair" or even significant.

      • It's not that their history makes them less of a woman, just that going through puberty with testosterone leads to advantages that those that went through non-testosterone puberty didn't have.

        Unfortunately, it's not as simple as taking testosterone blockers or whatever, they still don't reverse some of the advantages that going through testosterone puberty provides.

        Someone smarter than me may come along but if not just googling or ducking some knowledge about testosterone puberty will shine some light on why they've made this change in the sport..

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