Prompted by the release of USA Gymnastics @usagym trans policy.

Specifically, the implication that performance differences between children of either sex and of any gender identity are negligible, therefore inclusion of transgirls with females is fair.
Here is summary data from Catley and Tomkinson, 2012, who collated performance data from 85347 Australian schoolchildren aged 9-17 years old.
Source here (full text can be found on ResearchGate).

bjsm.bmj.com/content/47/2/9…
Test: 1.6km timed run (CV endurance)

The best 17 yr old girls are matched by average 17 yr old boys, and beaten, by some measure, by the best 9 yr old boys.
Test: 20m shuttle run, reps/time (CV endurance)

The best 17 yr old girls are matched by both average 17 yr old boys and the best 10 yr old boys, and beaten by the best 12 yr old boys.
Test: 50m timed sprint (muscular speed)

The best 15 yr old girls are matched by both average 15 yr old boys and the best 12 yr old boys.
Test: Basketball throw, distance (muscular power)

The best 17 yr old girls are beaten by average 15 yr old boys, matched by the best 12 yr old boys, and beaten by the best 13 yr old boys.
Test: Standing jump, distance (muscular power)

The best 15 yr old girls are beaten by both average 15 yr old boys and the best 12 yr old boys.
Test: Hand grip (muscular strength)

The best 15 yr old girls are beaten by both average 15 yr old boys and the best 13 yr old boys.
Test: sit and reach, distance (flexibility)

The best 15 yr old girls beat all the best boys. However, the pattern shows that female flexibility decreases during late puberty, while male flexibility improves. At 17 yrs old, the best males are more flexible than the best girls.
You’ll notice I skipped a couple of tables. They require nuanced discussion, of a broadly similar nature.

Test: Push ups, reps/time (muscular endurance)

Test: Sit ups, reps/time (muscular endurance)
Looking at the best performances for push ups and sit ups, the sharp plateaus in some data sets suggests that a test limit is being reached.
I see two options for the plateaus (happy to hear other suggestions):

1.Basic physics: for example, is it physically impossible for anyone to do more than 60 sit ups in 180s?

2.Test thresholds: that is, a target is set to be reached within time.
Looking at push ups, it’s clear that basic physics hasn’t limited girls to 18 reps in 30s, because boys manage more just fine.

(In fact, the boys don’t plateau in this test.)
It seems unlikely that the best 9 yr old girls can do the same number of push ups as the best 15 yr old girls. I suspect a test threshold has been applied.

All we can say here is that average 15 yr old boys can meet the female limit even for the best 17 yr old girls?
Looking at sit ups, which ultimately plateau in both sexes, it’s impossible to discriminate between a basic physics limit or a test threshold limit.

How fast can a person perform a sit up?
However, by comparison with the same types of tests in other settings - for example, armed forces fitness tests - it is entirely reasonable to assume there is a test threshold for both push ups and sit ups.
I would therefore question how good a measure of ‘muscular endurance’ these reps/time tests are. Would reps-to-fatigue (with some kind of interval limit per rep) not be a better measure?
Anyway, back to the point. The authors conclude that boys outperform girls in all tests except flexibility.
With that in mind, and with the understanding that this is just one of several large studies showing this pattern, I wonder where the idea that boys and girls are athletically much of muchness has come from?

Apparently, here.
Correction:

The best 17 yr old girls are matched by average 14 yr old boys, and beaten, by some measure, by the best 9 yr old boys
A note: if there are any gymnasts out there who would like to raise concerns/objections with @USAGym, please contact me.

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More from @FondOfBeetles

7 Nov
‘Without a sex-based category for female athletes, women are quite simply excluded from the top levels of sport.’

Great article here from ⁦@BarbaraRKaynationalpost.com/opinion/barbar…
‘First they justified trans women competing with women because they had “always” felt they were female. Then they say the “always” female trans athlete might “be” male for certain sports or at different times.’

@EthicsInSPORT
From the working group document:

‘Growing up male likely confers physical, hormonal, social and economic factors that contribute to this performance gap, but we cannot say that it is specifically due to testosterone in a way
that is significant and predictable.’
Read 6 tweets
3 Nov
On sex, balls and factories: a thread.
Let’s imagine a ball-making factory, the squishy, brightly-coloured kind of ball you kick around on the beach with a child (preferably one you own, not one stolen).
In that factory are two production lines. The first line paints balls red and the second line paints balls blue. Both machines are fed by boring beige balls.
Read 23 tweets
26 Oct
Jones et al., 2017 is repeatedly cited as evidence that transwomen do not have an advantage in female sports.

Here is my take.
They performed a literature search of transwomen in sport and concluded that:

“Currently, there is no direct or consistent research suggesting transgender female individuals (or male individuals) have an athletic advantage at any stage of their transition.”
This conclusion is not supported by the data they analyse.

First, the review intended to examine sports policies and participation, and consists largely of qualitative/survey data examining the experiences of trans people in sport.

This is valuable insight.
Read 12 tweets
24 Oct
The proposal that sports be divided into ‘performance pools’ undermines the very nature of competitive sport.
Let’s say I am matched in an boxing competition with a male of the same height, strength and speed. Our ‘output’ is considered equivalent, and thus the competition is deemed fair.

It is not fair.
Male physical output is a composite of two factors - male puberty and natural talent. Female physical output lacks the contribution of male puberty.
Read 9 tweets
23 Oct
@PeterTatchell Let’s go with the evidence.

Males who suppress T and do no exercise lose about 5% mass/strength in the first couple of years.

Males who suppress T and exercise mitigate loss and often make significant gains in mass/strength.

Small males are stronger than far larger females.
@PeterTatchell Among elite rugby players at all postions, the slowest males are only a little slower than the fastest females. The weakest males are stronger than the strongest females.
@PeterTatchell If rugby is a game for players of all sizes, strengths and speeds, do you think that the mixed England lineup would contain about 50% females?

No you don’t.
Nobody does.

Because while rugby might accommodate different physicalities, it appears to be limited *within sex*.
Read 12 tweets
20 Oct
People’s Republic of Liverchester? Manpool? I’m no longer fussy.
I’ve even got a Yorkshire husband willing to pledge allegiance to the dark side of it’s against ‘The South’.
Give us a couple of weeks and I reckon we’ll have Nottingham as well.
Read 4 tweets

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