Transgender athlete ‘was very dishonest’ says world’s strongest woman

Transgender athlete ‘was very dishonest’ says world’s strongest woman

Official Strongman

A British athlete crowned the world’s strongest woman says she was “robbed” of her winning moment after it emerged the original champion was a transgender woman who was ineligible to compete.

Andrea Thompson was awarded the title retrospectively after American athlete Jammie Booker was disqualified.

Thompson told BBC Sport the competition, held in Arlington, Texas, was “overshadowed by somebody who shouldn’t have been there”.

“I was very frustrated and angry with what she’s done,” she said. “She lied and was very dishonest, and took away a lot of things from a lot of women.

“The lady that came 11th didn’t get the chance to do the third day… to have the top 10 status in the world.”

Records show Booker took part in at least two other strongwoman competitions this year – winning the Rainier Classic in June and finishing second at North America’s Strongest Woman in July.

Andrea Thompson strains to lift a heavy barbell weightOfficial Strongman

Thompson, 43, eventually became the world’s strongest woman for the second time, having previously won the title in 2018.

But it was only after this year’s event finished that she learned her rival had been ineligible to compete.

“There was nothing at all during the competition – no-one had any reason to suspect anything,” said the mother of two from Suffolk.

“It was about six hours after that the first rumours started going round, and then the organisers contacted me.

What was the event at the centre of this dispute?

Strength contests have no single governing body, instead, private organisations run a range of competitions.

The World’s Strongest Woman title is awarded at the Official Strongman Games, run by Official Strongman Worldwide, a company registered in the UK.

More than 400 athletes from nearly 40 countries took part in this year’s event, which organisers describe as “one of the pinnacles of the strength world”.

The Games included contests across multiple gender, weight and age classifications.

Jammie Booker poses for the camera before walking to the podiumOfficial Strongman

How do the rules work?

A statement from Official Strongman said: “Athletes are assigned to men’s or women’s categories based on whether they are recorded as male or female at birth.

“It appears that an athlete who is biologically male and who now identifies as female competed in the Women’s Open category… officials were unaware of this fact ahead of the competition.”

In 2023, Texas introduced a law prohibiting “biological men from competing against female athletes”, although this only applies to college and university sport in the state.

Thompson believes strongwoman events may introduce sex screening in the future.

What about other sports?

In recent years a growing number of sports federations have barred athletes who have gone through male puberty from competing in elite female competition, amid concerns over fairness and safety, including World Aquatics and World Athletics.

In May the Football Association and the England and Wales Cricket Board were among a number of British sports bodies to follow suit, after the UK Supreme Court’s ruling that the legal definition of a woman is based on biological sex.

The moves have been opposed by trans rights campaigners, who argue they could violate human rights and insist inclusion should be prioritised.

Both World Athletics and World Boxing introduced genetic sex screening this year, claiming it is needed to protect the integrity of women’s competition.

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Source: BBC

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