A leading Canadian sportswriter and broadcaster, Mary Ormsby was a volleyball player at the Ohio State University where she is a member of its Sports Hall of Fame. She graduated with a degree in journalism and returned home to Toronto to write for the Toronto Sun and later, the Toronto Star. A five-time National Newspaper Award nominee, this is her first book.
"""It was the greatest moment in Canadian sports history (yes, including all the ones involving hockey players….) For thirty-six glorious hours, we were on top of the world…and then we weren’t. All these years later, even for those who didn’t live through it, the Ben Johnson morality play remains a signpost in our culture. Mary Ormsby, who was there, is a great, uncompromising reporter. She takes us back through the many twists and turns of the story with its collection of vivid characters and shows us what we all missed. Yes, Ben tested positive in Seoul. He fessed up at the Dubin Inquiry. They caught him twice more after that. Cue the cycle of shame and ridicule and pathos. But then Ormsby asks a question we should have asked a long time ago: 'Is it possible to railroad a guilty man?'"" —Stephen Brunt, best-selling author"