Caster Semenya in last-ditch bid to qualify for Olympics

Caster Semenya attempts to qualify for the Olympic Games in the women’s 5000m during the Newton Classic Qualifier at Kings Park Athletic Stadium on May 28, 2021
Caster Semenya attempts to qualify for the Olympic Games in the women’s 5000m during the Newton Classic Qualifier at Kings Park Athletic Stadium on May 28, 2021
Image: Roger Sedres

Caster Semenya will make a last-ditch attempt to qualify for the Tokyo Olympic Games when she races over 5,000m at a meeting in Belgium this week.

The 30-year-old is banned from competing in any race from 400m to a mile after the sport’s governing body, World Athletics, ruled in 2018 that to ensure fair competition, women with high natural testosterone levels must take medication to reduce them to compete in middle-distance races.

The double Olympic 800m champion, who refuses to take any medication to alter her testosterone levels, has been left with the 5,000m as her best chance to go to the Tokyo Games but her efforts so far to finish inside the qualifying mark of 15:10.00 have failed.

She has had two attempts since winning the SA 5,000m title in Pretoria in April but her fastest time was 15:32.15 at a meeting in Durban in May that was specially arranged to offer her an opportunity.

Semenya then left to race in Europe where she felt she had a better chance to qualify alongside stronger runners but in Regensburg, Germany, on June 19 could not do better than fourth, in 15:57.12.

Wednesday’s meeting in Liege, part of World Athletics’ Continental Tour, will be her last chance.

The International Olympic Committee has set Tuesday as the last opportunity for athletics to qualify for Tokyo but Athletics SA is understood to have secured her one day’s grace.

Hopes of an invitation to the Olympics are unlikely because 44 women have already qualified for the 42 places in the Tokyo 5,000m race.

The heats are on July 30 and the final on August 2.

Semenya continues to challenge the World Athletics ruling and has taken her case to the European Court of Human Rights but the case is unlikely to be completed by the time the Tokyo Games begin on July 23.

Last year, she attempted the 200m as an alternative, and lowered her personal best from 24.26 to 23.49, but still well outside the Olympic qualifying mark of 22.80.

She then abandoned plans in favour of the much longer distance because she said she feared injury. — Reuters

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