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Marion Jones goes from grace to disgrace
PARI—Once ranked among the greatest athletes of all time, Marion Jones
has seen the clouds of doping gather until they have irrevocably tainted
what should have been a glorious career.
Jones, 31, was on Friday handed a two-year ban by athletics’ world
governing body, the IAAF, which also recommended that the International
Olympic Committee (IOC) withdraw her five Olympic medals after she
admitted doping last month.
Jones, who is now retired, admitted in a US federal court last month
that she had used the designer steroid THG, or “the clear”, from
September 2000 to July 2001, ending years of angry denials of doping
allegations.
Jones’ confession came as she pleaded guilty to lying to a federal agent
about her drug use, a charge that could see her jailed.
The International Association of Athletics Federations said on Friday
that Jones was now considered disqualified from all competitions on or
subsequent to September 1, 2000, a ruling that means that all her
individual and team competitive results from that date are annulled.
The doping admission tarnished Jones’ greatest triumph - a five-medal
performance at the 2000 Sydney Olympics, which ran from September
13-October 1 of that year. It also made a mockery of Jones’ vehement
denials of doping over the past four years, as a woman once held up as
the epitome of strength and grace tried to distance herself from
disgraced associates and from evidence collected in the BALCO steroid
distribution scandal that linked her to doping. Long before she became
the most successful female athlete at a single Games by winning three
gold medals and two bronze at Sydney, Jones was recognised as an
extraordinary sports talent. At nine years old, she was a national
sprint champion and at 16 her results earned her a spot as an alternate
on the US 4x100m relay squad for the Barcelona Olympics.
She declined that berth, saying she preferred her first Olympic gold to
come not as a mere extra in the heats but in a true finals victory.
Multi-talented, she was a standout basketball player at the University
of North Carolina, where she studied communications and journalism,
disciplines that helped provide the basis of her facility in dealing
with the press.
A broken foot in 1995 prevented her from competing in the 1996 Atlanta
Olympics, and in the wake of that setback she decided to focus on
athletics and forego a possible basketball career. Guided by C.J.
Hunter, the shot putter she married in 1998, and Trevor Graham, the
coach she began working with in April 1997, Jones reigned on the sprint
track and in the long jump, posting 41 straight victories from 1997-98
in the combined disciplines.
Jones was virtually untouchable in 1998. In May she clocked a time of
10.71sec to become the second-fastest woman of all time over 100m,
trailing only world record-holder Florence Griffith Joyner. Jones
improved her best later that year with a time of 10.65. Jones also
established her personal best in the long jump in May of 1998 with a
leap of 7.31m, good enough to put her among the top 10 performers in
history. In September, she became the second-fastest woman ever in the
200m with a time of 21.62.
By the time Jones was being built up as the face of the Sydney Games,
she owned three world titles, winning 100m and 4x100m world gold in 1997
and the 100m world title in 1999. US broadcaster NBC vowed to follow her
bid for an unprecedented five gold medals at Sydney “like a
mini-series”, but even as she triumphed the first clouds appeared on the
horizon when Olympic officials announced that Hunter had tested positive
for the steroid nandrolone earlier in the year.
Jones said she supported her husband, who never competed in Sydney and
was later banned, and went on to complete her own historic Olympic
campaign. In 2003, Jones and the new man in her life, 100m world record
holder Tim Montgomery, became the “fastest couple on the planet”. The
pair had a son in 2003, Tim jnr, Jones absenting herself from the track
that season. By the time she returned in 2004, the BALCO investigation
had led to the discovery of the so-called designer steroid THG, and
linked the names of many prominent athletes, including Jones and
Montgomery, to the lab’s founder Victor Conte.
Montgomery was eventually stripped of his world record and banned based
on evidence collected in the BALCO investigation, but insinuations about
Jones - including allegations by ex-husband Hunter and Conte -
repeatedly failed to stick.—Agencies
She herself went on the attack, suing Conte over his doping accusations
against her and vowing that she had “never, ever” taken banned drugs.
The battle appeared to take a toll, however, as Jones struggled on the
track and saw invitations to prestigious meetings dwindle. A promising
2006 campaign was cut short by another doping incident, when it took a
backup “B” sample test to clear her of using the endurance boosting
hormone EPO. |