Marion Jones

Marion Jones (born October 12, 1975 in Los Angeles, California) is an American athlete, winner of five medals at the 2000 Summer Olympics. She holds dual citizenship from the USA and Belize (where her family is from) and she marks her victories with the flags of both nations.

Contents

Sports career

Excelling in both basketball and athletics (she was a participant in the 1992 World Junior Championships), Jones focused on basketball, playing on the North Carolina team that won the NCAA Women's Championship in 1994. When Jones lost a spot on the 1996 Olympic team because of an injury, she decided to concentrate on athletics.

She immediately won her first major international championships, becoming the 100 metre World Champion in Athens in 1997, while finishing 10th in the long jump. At the 1999 World Championships, Jones attempted to win four titles, but injured herself in the 200 m after a gold in the 100 m and a long jump bronze. A dominant force in women's sprinting, Jones was upset in the 100 m at the 2001 World Championships, as Ukrainian Zhanna Pintusevich-Block beat her in the 100 m, her first loss in the event in years. In the 200 m and 4 x 100 m, Jones did win the gold.

The U.S. Anti-Doping Agency investigated for possible drug use, in conjunction with the Bay Area Laboratory Co-operative scandal.

On her 2004 Olympics experience, Jones said "It's extremely disappointing, words can't put it into perspective." (Reuters) (http://www.reuters.com/newsArticle.jhtml?type=sportsNews&storyID=6092497) She came in fifth in the long jump and competed in the women's 4 x 100m relay where they swept past the competition in the preleminaries only to miss a baton pass in the final race. Jones promised that her latest defeat is not the end of her Olympic efforts.

On December 3, 2004, Victor Conte, the founder of BALCO, appeared in an interview with Martin Bashir on ABC's 20/20. In the interview, Conte alleged that Jones had used five different illegal performance enhancing drugs before, during and after the 2000 Sydney Olympic Games.

Personal life

Off the track, Jones married shot putter C.J. Hunter, who was a coach on the University of North Carolina track team, in 1998. Hunter was required to resign his position at UNC because of school rules that prohibited coach-athlete dating. He was banned from the 2000 Olympics after having tested positive for nandrolone. They divorced a year later.

In 2003, Marion Jones gave birth to a son, Tim Jr., named after his father Tim Montgomery, who broke the 100 m World Record in 2002. Because of her pregnancy, Jones missed the 2003 World Championships, but spent a year preparing for the 2004 Olympics.

See also

External links

Olympic medalists in athletics (women) | Olympic Champions in Women's 100 m
Betty Robinson | Stanislawa Walasiewicz | Helen Stephens | Fanny Blankers-Koen | Marjorie Jackson | Betty Cuthbert | Wilma Rudolph | Wyomia Tyus | Renate Stecher | Annegret Richter | Lyudmila Kondratyeva | Evelyn Ashford | Florence Griffith Joyner | Gail Devers | Marion Jones | Yulia Nesterenko
Olympic medalists in athletics (women) | Olympic Champions in Women's 200 m
Fanny Blankers-Koen | Marjorie Jackson | Betty Cuthbert | Wilma Rudolph | Edith McGuire | Irena Szewinska | Renate Stecher | Bärbel Eckert Wöckel (twice) | Valerie Brisco-Hooks | Florence Griffith Joyner | Gwen Torrence | Marie-José Perec | Marion Jones | Veronica Campbell
da:Marion Jones

de:Marion Jones et:Marion Jones fr:Marion Jones ja:マリオン・ジョーンズ

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