Marion Jones Timeline
Marion Jones Timeline
1992
Misses making the Olympic team by .07 when she finishes fourth in the 200 and declines a spot as a 4x100 relay alternate because, as she said, "when people come to see my gold medals, I want to be able to say I ran for them."
1994
Helps lead the North Carolina basketball team to a national championship.
1997
Forced to miss the Atlanta Olympics because of an injury first suffered on a basketball court at the World University Games, she gives up basketball and focuses on track and field, taking gold in the 100 at the World Championships in Athens.
1998
Marries shot putter C.J. Hunter, both of whom have designs on competing in the 2000 Olympics in Sydney.
1999
Wins a gold in the 100 and a bronze in the long jump at the World Championships in Sevilla, Spain.
2000
Running under a cloud of suspicion after reports surface that Hunter failed a drug test, Jones wins three gold (100, 200, 4x400 relay) and two bronze medals (long jump, 4x100 relay) down under.
2001
Loses her first 100 meter race in six years at the World Championships in Edmonton, where she did collect two golds (200, 4x100 relay).
2001
Hunter retires. He and Jones divorce the following year.
2002
Sets the meet record at the Prefontaine Classic with a 10.90 in the 100.
2003
Jones and world class sprinter Tim Montgomery announce the birth of their son. Jones misses the 2003 World Championships but prepares for the 2004 Olympics.
2004
A year after Jones' former coach, Trevor Graham, anonymously mails a syringe to the U.S. anti doping agency, Hunter tells the San Francisco Chronicle he injected Jones with banned substances and saw her inject herself. Jones denies the allegations.
2004
Jones fails to medal at the Athens Olympics, finishing fifth in the long jump, her only individual event.
2004
BALCO founder Victor Conte tells a national tv audience watching ABC that he gave Jones illegal performance enhancing drugs before, during and after the 2000 Olympics.
2005
Montgomery retires after being banned for two years because of doping violations.
2006
Jones tests positive for a banned substance at the U.S. Championships. She is later cleared by her second sample.
October 2007
Jones pleads guilty to lying to federal investigators about using performance-enhancing drugs.
December 2007
The IOC strips Jones of her five Olympic medals won in Sydney.
January 2008
Despite pleas that Jones be shown leniency, a judge sentences her to six months in prison.