British Rowing to ban transgender athletes from women’s events


British Rowing to ban transgender athletes from women’s events

Following consultation with members, British Rowing set to ban transgender athlete’s from women’s events.

The previous policy allowed transgender athletes to compete so long as they could show their testosterone serum levels were below five nanomoles per litre, despite an average range for women of between 0.5 and 2.4. The new policy will exclude any athletes that were not assigned the female gender at birth. 

Former US Olympic rower Dr Mary O’Connor has called on British Rowing to change the policy and said “There is no place for males in women’s sports. Fairness in competition is absolutely foundational in sports.” A female rower anonymously contacted The Telegraph and said “If I’m racing side by side with a male, and a male wins my event, you wouldn’t even dream of that being a possibility. You would expect someone to step in and say, ‘This isn’t OK.’”

British Rowing chairman Mark Davies has been an advocate for an open category for transgender athletes, similar to that of Triathlon, but has faced significant backlash from the board. 

The British Rowing policy change follows a number of NGBs and International Federations who have banned transgender athletes from competing in the female category. 

You may also like

View All

Pinned Article

Sport Resolutions Annual Conference 2026: Early Bird Tickets Now on Sale

Early Bird tickets for the Sport Resolutions 11th Annual Conference are now available. Join leading sport and legal professionals in London on 7 May 2026 for a full day of discussion, insight, and networking

Read More

Leading professionals turn down opportunity to have greater say in management of major tennis championships, claiming they are consistently ignored

The world’s top 10 male and female tennis players have turned down an offer from three out of four of the Grand Slams – with the Australian Open excluded - to establish a player council, claiming they are consistently ignored despite discussions

Read More

Mediation in Sports Disputes: A Global Perspective and Future Outlook

Sport Resolutions panel member Muiris Lyons reflects on new practitioner-led research into mediation in international sport, exploring why this highly effective process - with settlement rates of around 80% - remains underused, and how earlier, more consistent adoption could strengthen sports dispute resolution alongside arbitration.

Read More