The male track athlete who won an NCAA womens national championship denies having an unfair advantage over female runners.

“If anything, me competing against cisgender females is a disadvantage because my body is going through so many medical implications, like its going through biochemistry changes,” Franklin Pierce University runner CeCe Telfer told ESPNs “Outside The Lines” in a feature that aired Thursday.

WATCH:

“If anything, me competing against cisgender females is a disadvantage..”@FPUathletics track star CeCe Telfer talks about the physical challenges she faces while competing as a transgender woman. pic.twitter.com/9VhlOVA70V

— Outside The Lines (@OTLonESPN) June 13, 2019

“So being on hormone replacement therapy, your muscle depletion, your muscle is deteriorating, you lose a lot of strength because testosterone is where you get your strength and agility and all that athletic stuff, so I have to work twice as hard to keep that strength,” Telfer said in the interview. “And if I slack a day thats like three days set behind.”

Telfer, a biological male who identifies as a transgender woman, won the NCAA DII womens 400-meter hurdles championship last month, besting the second place finisher by more than a second.

CeCe Telfer easily won the womens 800-meter dash at the NCAA DII National Championships (Video screenshot/NCAA.com)

Telfer previously ran a variety of events for Franklin Pierces mens team mostly using the name Craig, according to school records. NCAA policy is that male athletes who identify as transgender can compete on womens teams if they suppress their testosterone levels for a full calendar year.

Telfer competed on Franklin Pierces mens team as recently as January 2018, according to published meet results from the Middlebury Winter Classic in Vermont. (RELATED: Beto ORourkes Plan Would Force Schools To Include Male Athletes In Girls Sports)

By that point Telfer had started using the name CeCe, while still competing on the mens team.

The issue of male athletes who identify as transgender competing in female athletics has risen in public debate, in part because of Democratic political pushes, and in part because Read More – Source

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