Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 31. Chapters: Dwain Chambers, Eric Crouch, Brock Berlin, Phil Bogle, Casey Bramlet, Byron Hardmon, Shane Andrus, Teyo Johnson, Quentin Griffin, Dustin Long, Cliff Washburn, Marcus Maxwell, Brent Grimes, John David Washington, Kris Griffin, Pete McMahon, Jeremy Parquet, Shawn Mayer, Aaron Hunt, Justin Kurpeikis, Gary Gibson, Mike Jemison, Jon Dunn, Tyson Clabo, Jimmy Verdon, Justin Jenkins, Tom Arth, B. J. Sander, Trent Bray, Seante Williams, Ryan Gibbons, Rufus Brown, Thomas Herrion, Ben Ishola, Tony Hollings, Scott McCready, Sacha Lancaster, Aden Durde, Bobby Blizzard, Eric Wilson, Mike Brisiel, Jermaine Allen, Steve Sciullo, Tim McGill, Tim Sandidge, Antonio Smith, Michael Harden, Lenny Vandermade, Josh Davis, Marquis Smith, Larry Croom, Sean Bubin, DeJuan Green. Excerpt: Dwain Anthony Chambers (born 5 April 1978) is an English sprinter of Afro-Caribbean descent. He has won medals on the international stage numerous times and is one of the fastest European sprinters in the history of recorded athletics. His primary event is the 100 metres sprint, in which he has the second fastest time by a British sprinter. He is the European record holder for the 60 metres and 4 x 100 metres relay events with 6.42 seconds and 37.73 s respectively. He received a two-year ban in 2003 for taking performance enhancing drugs. Chambers was a promising young athlete, setting a junior world record of 10.06 s in the 100 m. He was the bronze medallist in the 1999 World Championships and made his first Olympic appearance at the Sydney 2000 Games; he turned in the best 100 m performance by a European at both events. By 2001, he had become the top British sprinter, breaking the 10-second barrier twice at the Edmonton World Championships. He became the 100 m European champion and record holder in 2002 but, in October 2003, he received a two-year athletics ...