Originally published Friday, November 27, 2009 at 7:21 PM
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Track and field | Ex-sprinter Tim Montgomery discusses his doping
Tim Montgomery says he started taking performance-enhancing drugs because he wanted to beat American sprint rival Maurice Greene and become...
LONDON — Tim Montgomery says he started taking performance-enhancing drugs because he wanted to beat American sprint rival Maurice Greene and become the fastest man in the world.
The former 100-meter world-record holder, who also said he and former partner Marion Jones stored their steroids in the refrigerator "next to the vegetables," spoke to The Times of London newspaper from a federal prison in Alabama.
Montgomery, 34, is serving time for bank fraud and drug dealing.
"Maurice got in my head real bad," Montgomery said in the interview, which was published Friday. "I wanted everything that he had."
Montgomery criticized Greene for "clowning the other athletes."
And it was after the 1999 world championships in Seville, Spain, that Montgomery decided do something.
"I would give anything to be the world's fastest," recalled Montgomery, who left coach Steve Riddick and joined doping-tainted coach Trevor Graham. "I wouldn't let anything get in my way."
Montgomery never tested positive for drugs, but he was linked to the BALCO doping investigation and has admitted he doped before the 2000 Sydney Olympics. He retired after a two-year ban was imposed in 2005.
Montgomery said he and Jones — who won five Olympic medals in 2000 but later agreed to forfeit all medals and prizes dating to September 2000 after admitting she took performance-enhancing drugs — became an item in 2002 after spending several hours talking on a flight to Rome.
"Two hours later, we were alone in a hotel room together. Two weeks after that, we were crowned the world's fastest couple. And six months after that, she was pregnant," said Montgomery, who added Jones could make herself cry for cameras.
"Her best work was when she passed a lie-detector test."
A short time after they got together, Montgomery set the world record in the 100 in Paris, running 9.78 seconds — one hundredth of a second faster than Greene's previous record but eventually wiped from the books.
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Despite his success, Montgomery said Jones was the "prima donna" of Graham's group of track athletes, and added he was dating her for the public and not for himself.
"An athlete can be so consumed by being great," Montgomery said.
"And we were too similar, we both wanted to achieve at any cost and you can't have two people like that together."
Last year, Jones served about six months in prison for perjury in the BALCO case. The International Olympic Committee wiped her name from the record books in December 2007.
After years of denials, Jones admitted she used a designer steroid known as "the clear" from September 2000 to July 2001.
The drug was linked to the Bay Area Laboratory Co-operative (BALCO), a lab that became that center of a steroids scandal that touched numerous pro athletes.
Montgomery is in a minimum-security prison in Montgomery, Ala., and works as a landscaper.
But Montgomery said he has had some difficult moments since being locked up, including having to beat up a pedophile cellmate in a New York prison because otherwise "the other inmates would have thought I was soft."
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