New Headline: Triumphs Over Expectations: Elite Women in Wheelchair Basketball Shatter Stereotypes!
Assuming that sex is the key factor defining physical ability may undersell what many athletes are capable of.
Physiological differences between women and men in sports may be far less pronounced in wheelchair basketball players. Steph Chambers/Staff via Getty Images Sports Every March, millions of Americans fill out brackets and tune in to watch the NCAA college basketball tournaments known as March Madness. The men’s and women’s competitions unfold in parallel, each with their own brackets, champions, storylines and fan bases.
The separation reflects one of the most deeply embedded assumptions in sports: that women and men perform differently enough that they must compete apart. The divide is so normal, it’s rarely explained: On average, men are faster, stronger and have more endurance. As a result, performance differences between men and women are often assumed to follow directly from these physical traits.
This notion shape how sports organizations structure competition, how coaches train athletes and how researchers study performance. Sex becomes a shortcut – a way to predict what athletes can do before they ever step onto the court. As an exercise scientist who studies the physical demands of Paralympic sports , I wanted to know whether this assumption actually holds up.
My research on elite wheelchair basketball suggests it may not. I found that many of the differences widely attributed to physiological differences between women and men in sports are far less pronounced in wheelchair basketball players – and in most cases absent altogether. It may seem that wheelchair sports are too different from nondisabled sports to compare.
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