In June, several athletic governing bodies鈥攊ncluding Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI), which oversees international , and the International Swimming Federation鈥攖ightened restrictions on transgender athletes, saying such policies will create a more fair and level playing field.
Meanwhile, two quirky but fiercely competitive sports鈥攓uadball and Ultimate鈥攁re taking a different approach: radical inclusion.
Quadball (formerly and still best known as Quidditch) is a contact sport that was created on college campuses in the mid-2000s as a Muggle version of the fictional field game played on flying broomsticks in the Harry Potter聽series. Ultimate (formerly known as Ultimate Frisbee) is a team sport that involves throwing a flying disc down a field to score points in an end zone. Both sports鈥 governing bodies are implementing rules designed to allow as many and as varied competitors as possible. They argue that equal access to their leagues is more important than equal levels of challenge for every competitor, and that 鈥渇airness鈥 should begin by centering the most marginalized athletes on the field. 鈥淲hy not start with inclusion, with trying to bring as many people as we can into the great thing we call sport and all that it offers people?鈥 says Jenna Weiner, the first out trans woman Ultimate player, who consulted on policies for U.S. Ultimate.
Most mainstream sports regulate the bodies and biology of trans participants with policies that require transfeminine people to be on hormone-replacement therapy or forbid such treatment for transmasculine athletes, or they require trans athletes to monitor their hormone levels, noting that testosterone can be used as a performance-enhancing substance. (There are some exceptions to this, but these are the norm.)聽More extreme policies require or . These rules exclude people who can鈥檛 access, or don鈥檛 want, certain aspects of medical transition, like hormone therapy and surgeries, which take . Even policies that only require legal documentation matching the athlete鈥檚 lived gender can pose a barrier: the processes to change names and change gender markers (the M, F, or X on a license or other legal document) can be long and convoluted, and 听蹿辞谤 .
U.S. Quadball and USA Ultimate, the sports鈥 national governing bodies, decided not to go down that road. According to multiple sources within both organizations, they instead asked what barriers to entry might exist for trans people to participate in their sports, and how policies might create鈥攐r alleviate鈥攖hose barriers. In response, U.S. Quadball and USA Ultimate implemented rules that allow athletes to self-identify their gender, no questions asked, and that explicitly include nonbinary people. 鈥淲e understand that the process of transition is a very personal (and expensive) decision, and is influenced by many factors, none of which are, or should be, because a sport requires it,鈥 says U.S. Quadball in its cleverly named gender-inclusion policy, . It also states that the league 鈥渉opes to be a positive example for other sport leagues as well as a way to positively influence how players view other genders.鈥
It was this kind of inclusivity that drew 22-year-old nonbinary athlete Mac to the quadball team at Boston University, where they played for three years. (Mac asked that we not use their last name.) Mac had become interested in the sport as a young child when they saw people playing on the Boston Common, running around with brooms between their legs. When they joined the team at Boston University,聽 they weren鈥檛 yet out as trans, but the knowledge that it was an all-gender sport was appealing to them. 鈥淸Quadball] helped me figure out that I wanted to come out, because I felt comfortable playing,鈥 Mac says. 鈥淚 had never really been involved in team sports after they got gender separated, because it didn鈥檛 feel right for me. Being able to just play a sport where it鈥檚 about what I can do with my body, rather than the ways I don鈥檛 get along with my body, was really huge for me.鈥
鈥淓very practice, even if it wasn鈥檛 the best practice, is still infinitely, infinitely better than every other practice I鈥檝e had in my life before this season,鈥 Rio Chuck says.
U.S. Quadball first implemented a policy that allowed for gender self-identification in 2011, a year after it formed to govern the quickly growing sport. In July 2022, the sport from Quidditch to quadball in part to distance itself from J.K. Rowling, author of the Harry Potter series, who has come under fire for anti-trans comments in recent years. It鈥檚 a drastic move, but U.S. Quadball felt it had no other option. 鈥淔or Rowling to use her power and influence to demean and put down trans people鈥攊t鈥檚 very shocking after she spent so much time writing these books where a lot of people found acceptance and love for being who they are,鈥 says Mary Kimball, executive director of U.S. Quadball.
Meanwhile, USA Ultimate first drew up its trans-athlete policy in 2018. Initially, it followed the lead of the World Flying Disc Federation, which governs international competitions, including ones in which USA Ultimate teams participate. The World Flying Disc Federation follows the International Olympic Committee鈥檚 2015 rules requiring transfeminine athletes to be on hormone-replacement therapy for at least 12 months before competing, and to submit to regular testosterone-level testing. But within a year, USA Ultimate decided to reconsider. 鈥淲e looked at鈥攁nd then pretty quickly discarded鈥攐ther policies that exist,鈥 Kellan Gibboney, a community liaison and gender-equity consultant for USA Ultimate who helped develop the new policy, . In December 2020, the went into effect.
USA Ultimate鈥檚 new policy allowed 26-year-old nonbinary athlete Rio Chuck to join the San Francisco Nightlock, a women鈥檚 club team, for the first time in their 13 years playing Ultimate. 鈥淕rowing up, there was no point when I ever looked at the best men鈥檚 team and was like, I want to play for that team,鈥 they say. 鈥淎nd never was I like, Oh, I want to play for the best coed team. I was always like, I wish I could play in the women鈥檚 division.鈥
Chuck, who isn鈥檛 currently considering hormone therapy or any other aspects of medical transition, thought their only option would be the men鈥檚 division. As a result, they switched to coaching a few years ago. But the new policy made it possible for them to join a women鈥檚 team in 2021, resulting in the best season Chuck has ever had. 鈥淓very moment is like the best moment of my life. Every practice, even if it wasn鈥檛 the best practice, is still infinitely, infinitely better than every other practice I鈥檝e had in my life before this season,鈥 they say.
The implementation and enforcement of these policies has not聽been without incident, however: U.S. Quadball has faced accusations of players faking their gender in order to manipulate the rules. Kimball says she can only think of one example of that happening in her years overseeing hundreds of games, but the allegations have left a mark. 鈥淲hat these accusations have done is create an uncomfortable space for athletes who haven鈥檛 come out yet鈥攐r even if they are out鈥攂ecause they know their gender might be questioned if they do,鈥 she says. 鈥淚f you start trying to enforce it by demanding proof, you have consequences around making people uncomfortable by having to disclose.鈥 That, Kimball says, is the last thing the league wants to do for their trans and nonbinary players.
Despite the bumps, the policies have mostly been received with overwhelming support. By allowing trans athletes to lead the way in ensuring participation for all, U.S. Quadball and USA Ultimate are making a road map for other sports to follow鈥攊f they鈥檙e willing to change their approach to fairness and inclusion. This matters on and off the pitch: trans people鈥檚 rights are being eroded across the country, making it a much more hostile place to be openly trans or gender nonconforming, and much of this broader human-rights fight is being waged through athletics. 鈥淲e are being used right now as pawns, and our athletes are being caught in the crossfire,鈥 says Kimball. 鈥淲hat鈥檚 happening nationwide with trans rights is heartbreaking, and I hope we can use sports to provide a safe environment but also as a way to speak up, because we have a voice.鈥
Mac, the Boston University quadball player, emphasizes how important it is to have access to a supportive sporting environment. 鈥淏eing able to be a trans athlete gave me so much more joy within my body and helped me feel comfortable and happy,鈥 they say. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how else I would have gotten to this place without quadball.鈥