USA Swimming updates policy on the eligibility of transgender athletes

To optimise for archiving, the original image and related documents associated with this article have been removed.

USA Swimming has updated its policy on the eligibility of transgender athletes so that a three-person medical panel will determine whether “prior physical development of the athlete as a male” gives transgender swimmers an unfair advantage.

The policy update comes as a result of Pennsylvania university swimmer Lia Thomas who competed on the men’s team for three years before starting hormone replacement therapy in spring 2019. Thomas has been smashing records and finished a race in December 38 seconds ahead of the athlete in second place.

Thomas’ teammates have supported her saying “As members of the Penn Women's Swimming and Diving team and teammates of Lia Thomas, we want to express our full support for Lia in her transition. We value her as a person, teammate, and friend," they said, pushing back against anonymous statements to the press, which they said were "not representative of the feelings, values, and opinions of the entire Penn team, composed of 39 women with diverse backgrounds.”

However, there has also been opposition to Thomas with one anonymous parent saying “There is no chance this year. They train hard but know that they cannot beat Lia.” Last month parents sent a letter to the NCAA calling for the rules governing transgender swimmers to be changed.

USA Swimming said it “has and will continue to champion gender equity and the inclusivity of all cisgender and transgender women and their rights to participate in sport, while also fervently supporting competitive equity at elite levels of competition.” Testosterone tests for 36 months will be implemented with the new policy saying it “relies on science and medical evidence-based methods to provide a level-playing field for elite cisgender women.”

You can read the USA Swimming statement here

You may also like

View All

FIFPRO study finds playing-time gap between top and lower-ranked women’s teams is increasing injury risks on both sides

Research by FIFPRO, the International Federation of Professional Footballers, has drawn attention to a “two-tier ecosystem” within women’s football where top team players have overloaded schedules whereas those lower down the rankings are facing “underload,” which is increasing injury risks for both sides 

Read More

70% of 2026 Winter Olympic Games tickets sold, but Paralympic sales slower than expected

The international Olympic Committee has shared that 70% of 2026 Milano Cortina Winter Olympic Games tickets have been sold and that it hopes that the torch relay will continue to drive sales. However, sales for the Winter Paralympics are notably lagging behind

Read More

Los Angeles 2028 Olympic organisers generated over $2 billion in commercial revenue so far

The Los Angeles 2028 Olympic and Paralympic Games organising committee have generated over $2 billion in domestic sponsorship revenue so far, meaning it may become one of the most commercially successful Olympics in history

Read More