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She's Got Game

Women's professional tennis has cleared the way for an intersex player to compete on the tour. But with all of the questions her case raises about gender and biology, is women's tennis ready for Sarah Gronert?


Women's professional tennis is coming to grips with one of the most unusual cases in its 36-year history: an intersex player competing on the tour.

Sarah Gronert, a 22-year-old German, was born with both male and female characteristics. Gronert, who had surgery at 19 and is legally a woman, has been cleared by both the International Tennis Federation (ITF) and the WTA Tour to compete -- unlike male-to-female transsexual Renée Richards, who was forced to sue to secure the right to play on the women's tour in the 1970s. "It's a one-of-a-kind case," says out lesbian Martina Navratilova, an 18-time Grand Slam singles champion who now comments for cable outlet the Tennis Channel.

An ITF spokesman confirmed by e-mail that Gronert "is legally and biologically a woman and entitled to play on the ITF and WTA professional circuits." The ITF oversees the four Grand Slams and tournaments that fall below the main WTA circuit. A WTA official said the tour became aware of Gronert's case last spring and conducted a review with a medical delegate during the summer and fall of 2008. Gronert requested the review, the official said.

Under its bylaws, the WTA can question the eligibility of a player and require gender verification to determine sexual status. "The rule is designed to recognize the verified and legitimate gender of individuals, while also minimizing any gender-related advantages," said tour spokesman Andrew Walker. "Under this rule, Gronert is eligible to compete on the tour as a female."

Gronert has enjoyed moderate success this season, winning two ITF titles. This week, Gronert, who has earned less than $7,500 in prize money, is at a career high ranking of 574, some 180 places above where she finished in 2008.

Much remains unclear about Gronert's past and she has declined to speak to the media. The details of her case and the player's medical records are confidential, Walker said. Gronert could not be reached through the ITF, which declined to provide additional information. A spokesman for the German Tennis Federation said Gronert does not want to discuss her "personal background."

According to intersex expert Heino Meyer-Bahlburg, an intersex condition covers a wide spectrum of possible manifestations that generally reflect some kind of congenital anomaly. "There are many different conditions and many different hormonal pictures," says Meyer-Bahlburg, a professor of clinical psychology at Columbia University.

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Reader Comments
  • Name: Mark
    Date posted: 4/14/2009 3:07:00 PM
    Hometown: Somewhere, Idaho

    Comment:

    @arkie... oh. my. god. Here's a really great joke. Whats the difference between a drag queen, a transgender, a transsexual, and an intersex person? Give up? Don't know? Neither does every other straight person in the world, and right now, they OWN the place. You might feel the love a bit more if you removed your head from your ass and looked around a bit. Bigots don't discriminate.

  • Name: Roberta
    Date posted: 4/9/2009 10:55:00 PM
    Hometown: Twin Cities

    Comment:

    @Arkiebubba I've said it before and I say it again, the different groups are together because they face the same discrimination by the same people for the same reasons. It must be nice to live an insulated life where you don't face discrimination for who you are, but for those of us in the majority of the world its still something we have to deal with.

  • Name: Bruce
    Date posted: 4/9/2009 9:25:00 PM
    Hometown: Dallas

    Comment:

    Though "intersex" is gender term and not a sexual orientation issue, I think it's incredible that Martina and Amelie as openly Gay women and tennis players are coming to Ms. Gronert's defense. They are both inspirational athletes and women. Though I know very little about intersexed individuals, reading the novel "Middlesex" by Jeffrey Eugenides was quite eye opening and prompted me to read more about the various intersex manifestations as discussed by Heino Meyer-Bahlburg. At the end of the day, this is a gender issue and I trust the ITF and WTA made their decision to allow Ms. Gronert to play on the women's tour based on the best available science - not appearance, emotion, or any other subjective or arbitrary measure. I believe that gender and sexual orientation are both valid topics for the Advocate and as a rabid tennis fan, I thoroughly enjoyed reading this article and will follow Ms. Gronert's career.

  • Name: amy
    Date posted: 4/9/2009 5:32:00 PM
    Hometown: northern ca

    Comment:

    WTG, Larry. I can't believe somebody actually posted the first comment, and how callous it is. It's that same type of closed-mindedness that is at the root of all bigotry, including that directed towards our own LGBT community. Just because an idea is foreign is not a valid reason to reject it. And I know I falling right into my own trap by saying this, but I guess a self-proclaimed handle like Arkie Bubba sums up the mentality we're dealing with here... :P

  • Name: Larry
    Date posted: 4/9/2009 3:36:00 PM
    Hometown: Yucaipa

    Comment:

    Haven't you ever read an article simply because it's interesting? I agree -- our causes are different. But I'd like to think that every last thing I read and/or care about isn't limited to GAY, GAY, GAY! And this whole concept of transgender people being on their own -- NICE. Really compassionate.

  • Name: Arkiebubba
    Date posted: 4/9/2009 3:15:00 PM
    Hometown: Little Rock

    Comment:

    Why should I, a gay male, or any gay male, be any more interested in the Gronert case than anyone else? The world of "intersexed" persons, transexuals, or so-called transgendered persons is utterly foreign to me and no doubt to most of your other readers. Being gay doesn't seem to me to create an affinity. Gays and lesbians are my concern. Bisexuals can take care of themselves, but I welcome them to come along for the ride. "Transgendered" people need their own advocacy organization(s). Our interests and needs just aren't compatible.



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