The New Zealand weightlifter did not make the podium, after failing to advance to the final, but Laurel Hubbard has made history by becoming the first openly transgender athlete to compete in an individual event at the Summer Olympics.
Competing in the 87+kg class on Monday night in Tokyo, Hubbard struggled to lift 125 kg (275 pounds), putting her out of the running. Her official result is “did not finish,” as she bowed out after failing to record a clean lift in the snatch section of the two-part competition.
Hubbard had seemed to successfully lift the weight in her second of three attempts, but in a split decision, the judges ruled she had not held the bar steady above her head.
Despite not reaching the final round, Hubbard smiled and cupped her hands together in a heart gesture before walking off the stage at the Tokyo International Forum.
“My performance wasn’t what I had hoped, but I’m humbled by the support I’ve received from so many people around New Zealand,” she said, adding, “I am aware that my participation has been controversial.”
“Thank you to the IOC for living up to the Olympic values and showing that sport is for all and that weightlifting can be done by all types of people,” Hubbard said.
In her emotional farewell, Hubbard also thanked Japan for hosting the Games, according to her country’s Olympic committee.
Hubbard joined Canada’s Quinn, a midfielder on the country’s national soccer team who is transgender and nonbinary, in reaching new heights for trans athletes at the Tokyo Games. Quinn, a veteran of the women’s team who came out last year and uses one name, recently became the first openly trans person to compete in an Olympics.
Hubbard made headlines when the International Olympic Committee cleared her to compete — a decision that has sparked both support and criticism. For her part, Hubbard has welcomed the chance to compete on the world stage while also showing her true self.
“I commend the IOC for its commitment to making sport inclusive and accessible,” she said on Friday. After Monday’s loss, Hubbard also thanked the International Weightlifting Federation.
“They have been extraordinarily supportive,” she said. “I think that they, too, have shown that weightlifting is an activity that’s open to all the people of the world.”
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When she was in her 20s, Hubbard was a rising star in men’s weightlifting, but she quit the sport, she recently said, after struggling with “the pressure of trying to fit into a world that perhaps wasn’t really set up for people like myself.”
She began transitioning in 2012 — and after a hiatus of more than 15 years, she started working toward a return to competitive weightlifting.
Hubbard, 43, is 10 years older than any other athlete who was in her Group A heat at Monday’s competition.
The gold was won by China’s Li Wenwen, the world-record holder in the event.
Last Updated on Aug 3, 2021
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