'Bad guy' tag doesn't bother me: Justin Gatlin before World Championships
As the 100m showdown with Bolt at the World Championships heats up, two-time drug cheat says he's 'just a runner' and clash isn't good v evil
To many, sprinter Justin Gatlin will forever be the bad guy of track and field: a drug cheat forced to serve not one, but two doping bans.
As he nears the biggest race of his life, against Usain Bolt at the world championships tomorrow, the American hopes the world recognises he is more than that - much more.
The 100 metres showdown in Beijing matches the 33-year-old, undefeated for two years in sprints, against Jamaican world record holder Bolt in the blue riband event.
With world athletics continuing to wrestle with a series of doping allegations, which have rocked the sport in recent weeks, the Gatlin-Bolt clash has come, to many, to represent a tangible manifestation of its woes.
The championships will be littered with drug cheats, who have served their punishment, but Gatlin holds a special place in the Hall of Shame.