Source: Latest Headlines - The Athletic
For decades, female athletes have been studied as scaled-down versions of male physiology, leading to misdiagnosed injuries, inappropriate training protocols, and viral misinformation filling the gaps—ACL tear clusters in women's soccer becoming a prime example where TikTok speculation outpaces actual research. The Athletic's reporting captures a genuine inflection point: institutions like the IOC and sports medicine programs are finally funding sex-specific biomechanics research. The next generation of female athletes will have training regimens built on their actual bodies rather than male proxies. Better injury prevention directly improves performance, sponsorship value, and career longevity. It's as much a competitive advantage story as an equity story.