When Ella Nelson pressed record on Instagram, she wasn’t trying to make a statement. She was trying to process something that had arrived ten years too late.
“I’m going to lose my mind. This is a very niche experience to have,” she said. “I woke up to the news that the woman who placed in front of me at the Olympic semi-final to qualify for the Olympic final in 2016 has tested positive… I finished ninth overall. I missed out by one.”
One place.
At the Rio Olympic Games, Nelson crossed the line ninth overall in the women’s 200 metres — the first athlete outside the final, and by 1/100th of a second. It was her Olympic debut, and ultimately her only Olympic appearance. At the time, it was framed as a near-miss. A top-10 finish. A personal best of 22.50 seconds. A great result.
A decade later, the context has changed.
Ivet Lalova (left) edging out Nelson (right) in the heats of the 200m in Rio. In separate semi-finals, Lalova was 1/100th faster for the final place in the final.
The athlete who finished ahead of her, Ivet Lalova, has since tested positive for an anabolic agent relating to that period, one of seven athletes whose samples were reported as positive by the International Testing Agency and provisionally suspended. A B-sample still needs to be tested, but the positive arrives long after the stadium lights went out, and long after careers moved on.
“The majority of these positive re-analysis results are mainly due to technical advances,” the ITA said, with more sensitive detection of steroid traces.
“I missed out by one hundredth of a second,” Nelson said.
“You never know what can happen in the final”
Under reallocation processes, Nelson will likely technically become an Olympic finalist and 8th placegetter.
“And I am now technically eighth, I guess, once she goes through the B samples and everything like that,” she said. “But that also means that I should have, by all accounts, been in the final.”
That distinction matters more than it might appear.
“You never know what can happen in the final,” Nelson said. “That’s what everyone says. You just need to be there for things to happen. You’re in the race for a medal… and not even just for a medal.”
For athletes outside the podium conversation, an Olympic final is often the difference between career momentum and quiet obscurity. It changes how athletes are introduced, remembered, and funded.
Nelson was blunt about what was lost.
“With my shoe sponsor at the time, there’s bonuses that you get for being in the final,” she said. “I missed out on so much money — from my federation, from the shoe sponsor, from who even knows what else.”
Those opportunities don’t come back later. They are tied to the moment — to being there.
A familiar Australian story
Nelson’s reaction resonated widely because it sits within a long and uneasy history in Australian sprinting.
Raelene Boyle spent her career finishing behind Renate Stecher, who took gold in the 100m and 200m at the 1972 Olympics. Stecher was never formally caught but later named in German state-doping files. Boyle’s silver medals remain, but the context has never stopped shifting.
Melinda Gainsford-Taylor and Cathy Freeman raced in an era later reshaped by the disgrace of Marion Jones, whose admission of doping stripped medals but could not restore moments already lost. Gainsford-Taylor and Freeman both moved up a place to 5th and 6th respectively after Jones’s gold medal was stripped in 2007 following the Balco doping scandal.
The cost is not just historical. It is personal, financial, and permanent.
“My life could or could not have been so different right now,” Nelson said. “Who even knows?”
Sydney 2000 and the limits of fixing the past
The limits of retrospective justice are perhaps best illustrated by the women’s 100 metres at the Sydney Olympic Games.
Jones originally won gold before being stripped seven years later. But the International Olympic Committee stopped short of a simple reallocation. With silver medallist Ekaterini Thanou later implicated in her own doping scandal, the IOC made an extraordinary decision: the gold medal would remain unawarded.
Tayna Lawrence and Merlene Ottey were upgraded to silver and bronze respectively, while the top step of the podium was left empty.
It is one of the clearest examples that while results can be amended, history cannot be replayed.
“This is personal breaking news”
Nelson is careful not to frame her response as anger. If anything, it is shock, and perhaps a sense of grief.
“This is like personal breaking news to me,” she said. “You work your whole life to achieve a dream of being at the Olympics. And I was really happy with what I did. I finished top 10.”
She paused, then added perspective: the kind only athletes seem able to hold simultaneously.
“I’m losing it like — and this is, there are way more serious things happening in the world right now.”
That tension sits at the heart of her reaction. The understanding that sport is not everything, and that, for those who live it, it is almost everything.
Being “technically” an Olympic finalist ten years later is a line in a record book. Being an Olympic finalist in the moment is a career-defining experience.
What Nelson’s video captures, and why it has resonated, is the human cost of doping that sanctions can never fully repair.
Ten years on, the race is still being run. Just not on the track.
Watch Ella Nelson’s video on Instagram









