Transgender player Hannah Mouncey waits on bid to enter AFLW Draft
HANNAH Mouncey has posted to social media as she waits for a decision on whether she will be allowed to enter the AFLW Draft.
THE AFL is set to make a historic ruling on whether a transgender player can take part in the AFL Women’s competition.
Former national men’s handball player Hannah Mouncey has nominated for Wednesday’s draft and is waiting to find out whether she will be eligible to be recruited.
At the moment I am not in a position to make any comment surrounding my availability for the draft and will not be doing any interviews or making comment on the situation. Anyone with other requests can contact vivid sports management
â Hannah Mouncey ð¤¾ââï¸ (@hannahmouncey1) October 15, 2017
The 27-year-old was part of the national handball side that competed to qualify for the Rio Olympics as a man before undergoing hormone treatment to transition to become a woman.
At 190cm and 100kg, Mouncey has spent the past season playing in the ruck for Canberra’s Ainslie Tricolours, having been given approval to play in the women’s league.
She has previously been found to be well within the testosterone limits permitted by the International Olympic Committee that the AFL has adopted for transgender athletes.
The AFL has indicated it will rule on Mouncey’s eligibility in the coming days.
“I know that I am different, not necessarily in a good way or bad way,” Mouncey told the ABC’s Outer Sanctum podcast last month.
“People have said ‘with how big you are you’ll probably hold back a bit so you don’t hurt anyone’ and I’m like, ‘well no, I’m not going to hold back, that defeats the whole purpose’.
“I had my ribs broken in my last game so I know they can hit me as hard as I can hit them and do damage. I know I’m seen differently but I won’t approach it any differently.”
Mouncey acknowledged she would inevitably face scrutiny as the first transgender athlete in elite football but said she was prepared for any potential backlash. “If people have an interest in me because I’m trans, then that is what it is. I can’t control that,” she said.
“To be honest, I’ve probably heard and seen everything that you possibly can in the negative sense so that’s not really going to hold any fears for me there. I’m just keen to play, get picked up hopefully and then see what happens.”