They're still segregated by gender.
They're segregated by sex. That isn't the same thing.
Historically, the decision was made to extend extra protection to sporting activities for female persons, who cannot compete at the same level as males in the vast majority of popular sports, and whose separate sports leagues rarely had enough interest to really justify the expense of running them, so that many sporting opportunities at the time were available only to males. If we still wish to guarantee equality of opportunity to female athletes, specifically, and not just as a side effect of their being the majority of 'women athletes', then some kind of accommodation still has to be made. In general, I don't see why anyone would think it would be wrong to support female athletes too. The problem seems to be the use of the dated terminology 'women's sports', which was understood to refer to female athletes.
I would also like to express a second time, just to be clear, that... well, first, "hormone levels read[ing] 'woman'" isn't really a thing. Hormones don't work like that. But second, more importantly, hormone levels are not significant to the difference in athletic performance, which is caused by gross skeletomuscular structural differences that cannot ever be changed.
Your sleazy law school article from Duke has already had it's methodology questioned.
The sample size of
8 men and women in your Springer Link article is too small.
"A cross-sectional study of muscle strength and mass in 45- to 78-yr-old men and women"...is not the age group of most athletes, and thus irrelevant.
"Hand-grip strength of young men, women and highly trained female athletes" while it's questionable why the sample size of men exceeded women by three-to-one, I am just going to say that firm handshakes do not solely define all athletic prowess, especially in cycling, and move on with my life.
Finally "But, women are actually more prone than men to suffer many of the most common sports-related injuries. There are a variety of reasons for this "gender gap," and there is much about it that remains uncertain." Does NOT justify segregation of gender in non-contact sports such as Cycling.
Got any
real science to back up your junk pseudo-science beliefs?