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[h=1]Weightlifter Laurel Hubbard becomes NZ's first transgender Commonwealth Games athlete[/h][h=2][/h]Last updated 11:37, November 24 2017
Weightlifter Laurel Hubbard has become the first transgender athlete named in a New Zealand Commonwealth Games team.
The New Zealand Olympic Committee and Olympic Weightlifting New Zealand (OWNZ) on Friday confirmed the 39-year-old woman was one of 12 athletes in New Zealand's weightlifting team for April's games on the Gold Coast.
Hubbard will compete in the women's +90kg category, introduced by the International Weightlifting Federation at the start of the year.
The International Olympic Committee acknowledges athletes only as male or female. There is no transgender category.
READ MORE:
* Women's weightlifting breakthrough in Iran
* Aussies complain over Hubbard victory
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Hubbard, the daughter of former Auckland mayor Dick Hubbard, is understood to have become the first transgender athlete to represent New Zealand in any sport in March, when she competed in an international weightlifting event in Melbourne.
She comfortably won the 90kg+ section, causing some rivals to say it was unfair to compete against an opponent who had previously competed in national men's competitions as Gavin Hubbard.
At the time of her selection in March, OWNZ president Garry Marshall told NZME he believed Hubbard had "huge advantages" over her rivals.
"She competed for a long time as a man and her efforts were very strong. That strength has remained with her despite reduced testosterone.
"That point is not recognised by the science and some of our competitors would say that's not fair," Marshall said.
Laurel won both the Australia Weightlifting Open and Commonwealth Weightlifting Championships this year. She will compete at the IWF world senior championships in Anaheim in December.
Among others, joining Laurel in New Zealand's team is 2014 Commonwealth Games gold medallist Richard Patterson (-85kg), silver medallist Stanislav Chalaev (-105kg) and bronze medal winner Tracey Lambrechs (-90kg).
It will mark Patterson's fourth Commonwealth Games. No Kiwi weightlifter has previously reached the feat.
Dunedin's Andrea Miller (69kg), who won bronze in the 100m hurdles at the 2010 Delhi games, has successfully switched sports and will compete in the -69kg section.
Cameron McTaggart, the brother of promising Auckland pole vaulter Olivia McTaggart, has also been included.
"There's been a lot of hard work to get to this point and now these athletes can really work towards the games," OWNZ high performance manager Simon Kent said in a statement.
"We're going to Gold Coast 2018 to compete at the top level and we want to bring back more medals than we did in Glasgow.
New Zealand has won 39 weightlifting medals at past Commonwealth Games.
AT A GLANCE
Men: Ianne Ernesto Guinares (-62kg), Vester Villalon (-69kg), Cameron McTaggart (-77kg), Richard Patterson (-85kg), Stanislav Chalaev (-105kg), David Liti (+105kg).
Women: Phillipa Patterson (-53kg), Alethea Boon (-58kg), Andrea Miller (-69kg), Bailey Rogers (-75kg), Tracey Lambrechs (-90kg), Laurel Hubbard (+90kg).
[h=1]Weightlifter Laurel Hubbard becomes NZ's first transgender Commonwealth Games athlete[/h][h=2][/h]Last updated 11:37, November 24 2017
1NEWS
Laurel Hubbard will represent New Zealand at next year's Commonwealth Games.Weightlifter Laurel Hubbard has become the first transgender athlete named in a New Zealand Commonwealth Games team.
The New Zealand Olympic Committee and Olympic Weightlifting New Zealand (OWNZ) on Friday confirmed the 39-year-old woman was one of 12 athletes in New Zealand's weightlifting team for April's games on the Gold Coast.
Hubbard will compete in the women's +90kg category, introduced by the International Weightlifting Federation at the start of the year.
The International Olympic Committee acknowledges athletes only as male or female. There is no transgender category.
READ MORE:
* Women's weightlifting breakthrough in Iran
* Aussies complain over Hubbard victory
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Hubbard, the daughter of former Auckland mayor Dick Hubbard, is understood to have become the first transgender athlete to represent New Zealand in any sport in March, when she competed in an international weightlifting event in Melbourne.
She comfortably won the 90kg+ section, causing some rivals to say it was unfair to compete against an opponent who had previously competed in national men's competitions as Gavin Hubbard.
At the time of her selection in March, OWNZ president Garry Marshall told NZME he believed Hubbard had "huge advantages" over her rivals.
"She competed for a long time as a man and her efforts were very strong. That strength has remained with her despite reduced testosterone.
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"That point is not recognised by the science and some of our competitors would say that's not fair," Marshall said.
Laurel won both the Australia Weightlifting Open and Commonwealth Weightlifting Championships this year. She will compete at the IWF world senior championships in Anaheim in December.
Among others, joining Laurel in New Zealand's team is 2014 Commonwealth Games gold medallist Richard Patterson (-85kg), silver medallist Stanislav Chalaev (-105kg) and bronze medal winner Tracey Lambrechs (-90kg).
It will mark Patterson's fourth Commonwealth Games. No Kiwi weightlifter has previously reached the feat.
Dunedin's Andrea Miller (69kg), who won bronze in the 100m hurdles at the 2010 Delhi games, has successfully switched sports and will compete in the -69kg section.
Cameron McTaggart, the brother of promising Auckland pole vaulter Olivia McTaggart, has also been included.
"There's been a lot of hard work to get to this point and now these athletes can really work towards the games," OWNZ high performance manager Simon Kent said in a statement.
"We're going to Gold Coast 2018 to compete at the top level and we want to bring back more medals than we did in Glasgow.
New Zealand has won 39 weightlifting medals at past Commonwealth Games.
AT A GLANCE
Men: Ianne Ernesto Guinares (-62kg), Vester Villalon (-69kg), Cameron McTaggart (-77kg), Richard Patterson (-85kg), Stanislav Chalaev (-105kg), David Liti (+105kg).
Women: Phillipa Patterson (-53kg), Alethea Boon (-58kg), Andrea Miller (-69kg), Bailey Rogers (-75kg), Tracey Lambrechs (-90kg), Laurel Hubbard (+90kg).