RIO DE JANEIRO -- Dutee Chand pulled out all the stops to run at the Olympics, even taking the international track federation to court in her bid to get to Rio de Janeiro.She won that legal battle and, ultimately, it got her just 11.69 seconds of competition in heat five of the 100 meters on Friday.Chand said it was worth every tiny moment at the Olympic Stadium.Chands victory at sports highest court last year forced the IAAF to temporarily shelve the hyperandrogenism rules that enforced a limit on female athletes naturally occurring testosterone levels and affected Chand, South African 800-meter runner Caster Semenya and others.It wasnt an easy journey to participating in the Olympics. It has taken me 14 years of training and hard work, Chand said in an interview with The Associated Press as she prepared for her Olympic debut. My efforts have been rewarded.Chand had wanted to be a runner from the age of six.After Fridays race, where she finished seventh in her heat to be eliminated, she hung around for the worlds media, smiling shyly while answering questions.Her story, much like Semenyas, involves a highly contentious issue.Hyperandrogenism causes some women with intersex conditions to produce much higher levels of testosterone than normal. In 2011, the IAAF decided to force those athletes to lower their levels artificially to be eligible to compete, believing the testosterone gave them an unfair advantage.For the 20-year-old Chand, it led to turmoil in her young career.Having won a bronze medal in the 200 meters at the 2013 Asian championships, she was dropped from Indias Commonwealth Games team the following year after undergoing gender verification tests, and later ruled ineligible to compete.Chand, who was just a teenager when she learned of her condition, decided to challenge the IAAF on that, claiming it was unfair to regulate a naturally occurring condition.(It) helped me in winning support all around, she said of her case, which lifted the lid on the IAAFs rules and on a largely misunderstood condition.After winning that fight at the Court of Arbitration for Sport last year, Chand couldnt win another competitive tussle on the track at the Olympic Stadium. But already, minutes after running in Rio, she was talking about the 2020 Olympics in Tokyo.---Associated Press writers Ashok Sharma in New Delhi and John Leicester in Rio de Janeiro contributed to this report. Josh Mahura Jersey . The showiest items on Calgarys lot were forwards Mike Cammalleri and Lee Stempniak. Both will be unrestricted free agents this summer. Nicolas Deslauriers Jersey . -- On the field, it was business as usual for Jameis Winston and No. https://www.cheapducks.com/537c-sergei-fedorov-jersey-ducks.html . Clarke was injured while practicing on the Doha Golf Club range after the pro-am on Tuesday. The Northern Irishman arrived at the course on Wednesday hoping to start, but after hitting a few balls on the practice putting green Clarke advised officials he was not fit to play. Ryan Kesler Jersey . Sulaiman, 44, was chosen unanimously Tuesday in a vote by the leadership, the World Boxing Council said. Sulaiman becomes the sixth president of the organization. Cam Fowler Jersey . Dallas hasnt ruled out the star quarterback for Sunday nights game against Philadelphia, but all signs point to Romos back injury pushing Kyle Orton into the starting role after two years of limited play as the backup. Surely Ortons name isnt the first that comes to mind for fans wanting a change after years of damaging interceptions, fumbles or, most infamously, the field goal flub when Romo dropped the snap on a kick that could have won his first playoff game in 2006. Mercedes boss Toto Wolff says a miscommunication caused by the timing of the teams flight home caused the short-lived protest of Max Verstappens driving after the Japanese Grand Prix.Verstappen held off Hamilton late in the race at Suzuka with a move Wolff later called refreshing but potentially over the line. Mercedes formally protested Verstappens driving, but by the time it was lodged the Dutchman and Lewis Hamilton had already left the circuit.Wanting to speak to both drivers, the FIA said it would have to defer the protest -- and therefore keep the result provisional -- until this weekends U.S. Grand Prix. A confusing couple of minutes followed, where Hamilton deleted one tweet and then questioned the teams protest in another, before Mercedes withdrew the complaint.Wolff says team representatives still at the circuit had been unable to contact him at the crucial moment a decision had to be made about lodging a complaint.It was a miscommunication, he explained in Austins Friday press conference. When we left the circuit, I said that the Verstappen manoeuvre was a hard manoeuvre but probably what we want to see in F1. It is refreshing and I think the drivers need to sort that out among themselves on track. We decided not to step in.Then there was an unfortunate coincidence that we took off and left and the team had a minute to decide whether to protest or not. Annd that is what they did.dddddddddddd. Once we were able to communicate again, which was 30 minutes after take-off, we decided to withdraw the protest.Hamiltons tweets came after a weekend which saw the Englishman at odds with the media for what he felt was disrespectful to the media for the reporting of his use of Snapchat in a press conference. The world champion has looked much more relaxed in Austin this weekend and Wolff thinks Suzuka was just an example of pressure getting the better of him.I think that generally all of us we underestimate the pressure that is on these guys. A couple of races before the end of the season there is all to win and all to lose. And I guess after Malaysia when he was in the lead, 25 points to take, the engine blew up.That was a very difficult situation for him to cope. As cool as someone might seem to the outside, inside it kind of eats you up -- and that may be why the weekend in Suzuka was a bit difficult for him. He knows exactly that there is a job to be done in the car and a job to be done outside of the car, and it just needs small inputs, not more, and that is what happened.We had a couple of conversations but it was generally about how things can be improved. Not a headmaster kind of discussion. ' ' '