as someone who ran track competitively in high school and in college, i don't believe that most athletes are taking some kind of banned substance...
there is certain level of natural ability that marion jones had but to stay on top, you need to work hard, just like in any thing else...
i was a pretty good runner...i was all-state in high school and all-conference and an all-american in college, but i knew the limits of my abilities and i knew that i was never going to compete at the level of someone like marion jones...
when you are at that level, there is immense pressure to stay at that level...
especially in a sport where youth is valued and you're looking over your shoulder to see who is coming up behind you...
in track, most of your income comes from endorsements and appearance fees, and you don't get either of those unless you're on top...
track is like any other sport...
you're not going to do it for the rest of your life, so you better save your money for the next stage...
when marion saw she was falling behind, she should have quit...she could have gone into broadcasting like michael johnson or carol lewis...
i don't feel sorry for marion mainly because there are track and field athletes out there that are successful without taking banned substances...
the bottom line is she was looking for a shortcut and now she's paying the price...
it does suck...she was someone i admired as well...
yes, it's great that she stepped forward now, but she should have as soon as she discovered what was going on...
now the people that ran with her on the gold medal relay teams might have to give back their medals too, which is totally unfair (to the ones that didn't do anything...yahoo reported 2 of her medal teammates have served previous bans for violating the performance enhancing policy)...