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Backlash from Australia against transgender weightlifter

Author
AAP ,
Publish Date
Fri, 24 Nov 2017, 4:18PM
Transgender athlete Laurel Hubbard competing today in the weightlifting compeition of the World Masters Games at AUT Millennium in Auckland. (Doug Sherring)
Transgender athlete Laurel Hubbard competing today in the weightlifting compeition of the World Masters Games at AUT Millennium in Auckland. (Doug Sherring)

Backlash from Australia against transgender weightlifter

Author
AAP ,
Publish Date
Fri, 24 Nov 2017, 4:18PM

Australia's weightlifting chief says New Zealand's selection of transgender athlete Laurel Hubbard will create an uneven playing field at next year's Commonwealth Games.

Hubbard, who will compete in the 90kg-plus division on the Gold Coast, will be the first transgender athlete to represent New Zealand at a Commonwealth Games.

As Gavin Hubbard, the 39-year-old was a national junior record-holder in the male 105kg class before she transitioned into a woman in her mid-30s.

Rival athletes complained that she had an unfair advantage after she won gold at the Australian Open this year, lifting 123 kilos in the snatch and 145 kilos in the clean and jerk.

Australian Weightlifting Federation chief executive Michael Keelan on Friday claimed Hubbard would have both a physiological and mental edge over her rivals.

"We're in a power sport which is normally related to masculine tendencies ... where you've got that aggression, you've got the right hormones, then you can lift bigger weights," he told AAP.

"If you've been a male and you've lifted certain weights and then you suddenly transition to a female, then psychologically you know you've lifted those weights before.

"I personally don't think it's a level playing field. That's my personal view and I think it's shared by a lot of people in the sporting world."

Hubbard was unavailable for interview but Olympic Weightlifting New Zealand said she met International Olympic Committee regulations related to acceptable testosterone levels.

Tasmanian Kaitlyn Fassina is the only Australian woman likely to compete in Hubbard's 90kg-plus category on the Gold Coast

Keelan said the AWF had written to the IOC and the International Weightlifting Federation raising concerns about transgender athletes but were yet to hear back.

The vexed issue of transgender inclusion in elite sports was debated in Australia recently when former male handball player Hannah Mouncey was barred from the AFL Women's competition.

The 190cm, 100kg ruck transitioned in 2015 and was understood to have met IOC regulations but was told she must wait until next year to nominate for the draft.

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