in Seul 1988 she felt down in semi final after signed second fast time in the quartes.
She was found with a handbags full of steroid tablets, then in 1992 olimpic she retired from semi finals, then tested positive for testosteroids, squalified but reinserted, she accused his ex houseband, then also coach of having boicotted her sport life. Iaaf then retired her squalified in 1995. She returned to competition and won Atlanta olympic, then world champs,
Engquist faces jail after drug confession
Ludmila Engquist's admission of drug-taking, at a press conference in Copenhagen before a select band of three Swedish journalists, no doubt signalled the end of a remarkable sporting career. And yesterday the bad news got worse for her when Swedish police, in her absence, raided the family home in Stockholm.
If they have found the anabolic steroids she admits she smuggled into Sweden this year - and the police are implying that not everything was in order - the Russian-born woman who won over her adopted country with Olympic and world championship victories in the 100m hurdles, and with her recovery from breast cancer, could face up to two years in prison.
HUSBAND ADMITS HE WAS A REAL PILL
The husband and coach of Russian hurdler Lyudmila Narozhilenko says he put banned steroids into his wife's prescribed medication because she planned to leave him.
In a letter to the Russian track and field federation, Nikolai Narozhilenko said his wife had fallen in love with her Swedish manager and planned to divorce him and move to Stockholm with their 11-year-old daughter.
Out of spite, Narozhilenko said, he replaced harmless protein pills with 35 anabolics.
Lyudmila Narozhilenko, 28, was suspended for four years after testing positive for drugs following meets in Spain in March, where she broke the world record three times in the 60-meter hurdles. The records were later negated.
After receiving the statements from Narozhilenko's husband, however, the Russian track federation requested the International Amateur Athletic Federation, the sport's world governing body, to consider Lyudmila's case.
The federation also fired Nikolai Narozhilenko from the coaching staff and is suing him for damages.