Jones banned from Beijing

13 December 2007 - 02:00 By unknown
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THE International Olympic Committee formally stripped Marion Jones of her five Olympic medals yesterday, wiping her name from the record books after she admitted to doping.

THE International Olympic Committee formally stripped Marion Jones of her five Olympic medals yesterday, wiping her name from the record books after she admitted to doping.

The IOC also banned the disgraced American athlete from attending next year's Beijing Olympics in any capacity and said it could bar her from all future games altogether.

Jones had already handed back the three gold and two bronze medals she won at the 2000 Sydney Olympic games.

Last month, the International Association of Athletics Federations erased all of Jones's results dating back to September 2000, but it was up to the IOC to formally disqualify her and strip her of her Olympic medals.

The decision was announced by IOC president Jacques Rogge at the end of a three-day executive board meeting.

Jones won gold medals in the 100 metres, 200 metres and 4x400-metre relay in Sydney, and bronze in the long jump and 100-metre relay. She was the first female track and field athlete to win five medals at a single Olympics.

In addition to those medals, the IOC also disqualified Jones from her 7th-place finish in the long jump at the 2004 Athens Olympics.

The IOC postponed a decision on redistributing her medals, including whether to strip her American relay teammates and whether to upgrade doping-tainted Greek sprinter Katerina Thanou to gold in the 100 metres.

After long denying she ever had used performance enhancing drugs, Jones admitted in federal court in October that she started using steroids before the Sydney Games.

She said she'd used the designer steroid "the clear" from September 2000 to July 2001.

The executive board declared Jones ineligible for the Beijing Games "not only as an athlete but also in any other capacity".

Jones has retired as an athlete and is banned by US officials from competition for two years. But the IOC wants to keep her from going to the Olympics as a coach or in any other role, and said she could face a lifetime Olympic ban pending the outcome of the investigation into BALCO, the San Francisco laboratory that peddled performance enhancing drugs to athletes. - Sapa

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