杏吧原创

A podcast explores how sport is drawing the line between men and women

The deeply researched podcast series Tested tells the stories of Namibian sprinter Christine Mboma and Kenya鈥檚 Maximila Imali, and how their early successes made their womanhood suspect to some
2XNT486 Saint Denis, France. 02nd Aug, 2024. Olympics, Paris 2024, athletics, Stade de France, preliminary competition, view into the stadium. Credit: Sven Hoppe/dpa/Alamy Live News
The athletics stadium at聽the Paris Olympics last聽month
dpa picture alliance/Alamy


Rose Eveleth
NPR and CBC

The Olympics are over. But I am still thinking about the displays of strength, skill, teamwork 鈥 and joy. Decathlete Markus Rooth skipping as he realised he had won his 100 metre heat. The women of Italy鈥檚 gold medal-winning fencing team huddled to celebrate each other. Gymnast Jordan Chiles almost crying at the conclusion of her dazzling floor routine while her proud father thumped his chest in the stands.

I am also thinking about athletes who weren鈥檛 in Paris, such as Namibian sprinter Christine Mboma, who won silver in the 200 metres at the Tokyo Olympics at 18. She loves to run 鈥 it is where she can forget the hardest parts of her life: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 love it to become famous鈥 It鈥檚 in my blood.鈥 Then there is Kenya鈥檚 Maximila Imali, a standout in the 400 and 800 metres for the past decade and, more recently, in the 100 and 200. She has held national records in the 100, 200 and 400, as well as the 4 x 200 metres relay.

The pair are at the centre of Tested, a six-part podcast hosted by science journalist Rose Eveleth. It is about how sports have drawn the line between men and women 鈥 usually at women鈥檚 expense. Eveleth spent nearly a decade researching the stories that became Tested and it shows: each episode is carefully researched and by many references.

(210803) -- TOKYO, Aug. 3, 2021 (Xinhua) -- Christine Mboma of Namibia celebrates after the women's 200m final at Tokyo 2020 Olympic Games, in Tokyo, Japan, Aug. 3, 2021. (Xinhua/Lui Siu Wai) Xinhua News Agency / eyevine Contact eyevine for more information about using this image: T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709 E: info@eyevine.com http://www.eyevine.com
Runners Christine Mboma聽(above) and Maximila Imali (below)
Mark Schiefelbein/AP/Alamy

Like others before them, both Imali鈥檚 and Mboma鈥檚 early successes made their womanhood suspect to some. Given blood tests and invasive physical exams (鈥淚 went home crying,鈥 says Imali) at the behest of World Athletics, the body governing international track and field, they were faced with a career-defining choice.

Both see themselves as women, and always have. But World Athletics classes them as having differences in sex development, also known as intersex. This is any of several conditions by someone鈥檚 sex chromosomes, balance of sex hormones, internal anatomy or external genitalia diverging from the expected.

2MNHFJ6 Kenya's Maximila Imali reacts as she crosses the finish line to win her women's 400m semifinal at Carrara Stadium during the 2018 Commonwealth Games on the Gold Coast, Australia, Tuesday, April 10, 2018. (AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein)

Mboma and Imali have higher levels of testosterone than average for women without differences in sex development. They received an ultimatum: to run at elite level, they must lower this hormone to what World Athletics deems an acceptable level 鈥 a target above the average for most women, but below the lowest level typically seen in men.

Tested follows their responses. Mboma chooses to suppress her testosterone, a difficult trial-and-error process for which she and her doctor receive little help, and one the World Medical Association considers unethical. She tries, and fails, to qualify for the Paris games.

As for Imali, at 28, every missed Olympics may be her last chance. Yet she decides not to lower her testosterone, but to fight via the international sports court for her right to compete. That verdict is unresolved at the podcast鈥檚 end.

These are just two stories in the century-plus history of women in elite athletics, which moves from a brief, humiliating era of 鈥渘ude parades鈥 and genital inspections to decades of blood tests and 鈥渃ertificates of femininity鈥. Today, the test for running is based on testosterone levels. But, as Tested shows, there is so much we still don鈥檛 know about this hormone.

Among the other questions the podcast asks are why is everyone who has been dubbed 鈥渢oo masculine鈥 since 2009 a women of colour from a lower-income nation? How much does testosterone actually matter in performance? Why are sex hormones the basis of division at all when so many other factors drive success in sports 鈥 including other genetics and your country鈥檚 prosperity? What is the point of these categories we have made in the name of fairness?

Science alone can鈥檛 answer. Nor will this series. But what Tested does so well is context: history, science, contested data, politics and an invitation to think more deeply about things we take for granted. And we are also invited to wonder, with Eveleth: 鈥淗ow much suffering is worth allowing 鈥 and whose 鈥 in the name of categorising?鈥

Topics: Biology / Genetics / Sport