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Former track star Marion Jones joins the Women NBA

The last time Marion Jones played competitive basketball was in 1997. Now, 13 years, five stripped Olympic medals and one prison term
later, the former track star will make a return to the sport

.

Jones signed a one-year contract with the WNBA’s Tulsa Shock on Tuesday. In December she announced her intentions to play in the women’s professional basketball league, but assumed she’d have
to play in Europe first as a tune-up. Shock head coach and general
manager Nolan Richardson didn’t think so. He worked out Jones over the
weekend and signed her to the rookie’s minimum, $35,000, today.

“Watching her go through drills, I saw a player who’s perfect for our system,”
Richardson said at the news conference. “The one thing I do know is she
can run, and any player on my team who wants to be successful needs to
be able to run.”

Richardson used his press-heavy “40 minutes of hell” basketball to lead the Arkansas men’s basketball team
to the national championship in 1994. He plans to use the same style in
the WNBA, hence the necessity to run.

The same year Richardson and the Razorbacks were cutting down the nets, Jones was the freshman
point guard on the North Carolina women’s basketball team that went
33-2 and won a national title of its own. She started all four seasons
in Chapel Hill before leaving the sport in 1997 to focus on her track
career.

Jones went on to win five Olympic medals in sprints and long jump but was later stripped of those after admitting to using
performance enhancing drugs during her career. During a federal
investigation into the scandal, Jones lied about doping and her role in
a check-fraud scheme. She served six months in a Texas federal prison
for the offenses.

Her comeback is a boon to both her career and the WNBA. Though playing in Tulsa for a mediocre team is far removed
from being a star of the Summer Olympics, Jones can rehabilitate her
tarnished image with a good showing in the league. PEDs or not, she was
one of the best athletes in the world. Even after prison, pregnancies
and inactivity, it’s hard to believe the 34-year old has slipped too
much.

The WNBA needs Jones just as much as she needs it. The league has been floundering in recent years and any publicity the
former Olympic champion can bring to women’s basketball will be
well-received.

If Jones starts the season on the roster, she’d make her WNBA debut on May 15.