Again and again, Dr Williams has delved into this library to chart the genetic characteristics of superior physical performance. “It’s an incredible resource for us to have, an opportunity to chart the vast map of genes that influences sporting performance.”
Over the years, he’s published a series of papers – identifying patterns and investigating correlations to reveal what makes these athletes superior. The genes that determine muscle mass, fast-twitch and slow-twitch fibres, blood oxygen levels, hormone production, fat mass and much more. “For coaches, doctors and athletes, it’s data that tells you about stamina on the track, strength in the tackle, resilience from injury or recovery time after a match.”
This insight could be vital for recruiting players, improving performance, preventing and treating injuries, and more. But it also sheds light on just how different elite athletes are compared to the rest of us – showing the exceptional combination of exceptional genes it takes to reach the top.
People in elite sport – including the administrators – are well versed in the lifestyle factors of performance. They understand how training and nutrition can relate to the time an athlete posts at the finishing line, the distance they throw or the tries they score. The genetic component is less understood.
In a sense, there are few people in the world who better understand what really constitutes an elite athlete than Dr Williams – which gives him a powerful voice in the debate around the impact of DSDs.
Called to Switzerland
As the highest court in international sport, CAS has heard many high-profile cases – from state-sponsored doping to financial fair play. Yet Caster Semenya’s case was one of the most contentious – a moral dilemma that pitted sporting competition against human rights. It was even dubbed the ‘Sporting Trial of the Century’ by some in the media.
To make Semenya’s case and challenge the scientific basis of the IAAF regulations, her legal team assembled a group of experts. Enter Dr Williams. As well as producing a comprehensive written submission stretching to more than 80 pages, he left Manchester Metropolitan University and flew to Lausanne, Switzerland to testify. Over the course of four days, he gave his evidence and was cross-examined. “While it was an intimidating setting, I was actually pleased to have the chance to lay out what I considered to be a compelling argument.”
First, there is the focus on testosterone. Some DSDs may result in higher levels of the hormone, without it being properly processed – without gaining the advantage a test suggests. For most, the hormone boosts haemoglobin levels, muscle mass and skeletal development. Removing or inhibiting that testosterone will, over time, reduce the blood’s ability to move oxygen to the muscles and it will partly diminish those muscles, but it won’t shrink the bones. “There’s no question that naturally occurring testosterone offers some advantage in performance. Quantifying that advantage is difficult. Reversing that advantage is, I think, unethical – if not impossible.”