The Australian swimmer last month had her provisional four-year suspension cut in half but her battle to return to the pool is not over.
In the end,Shayna Jack didn't need to convince critics or internet trolls of her inadvertent ingestion of ligrandrol. Alan Sullivan QC was another matter.
In her first interview since stepping down,Leigh Russell has urged her successor to take up the fight on anti-doping changes and queried FINA over their handling of Mack Horton's protest.
The Shayna Jack case has seen new calls for discussion about the support available for athletes and the challenges they face in the strict liability platform.
Cate Campbell said the'hysteria'surrounding the doping case had damaged the young swimmer,who has been given the green light to return to the pool next year.
The Australian swimmer can return to the pool by the middle of next year after the Court of Arbitration for Sport halved her four-year ban from the sport.
As NRL officials become increasingly frustrated at the time taken to finalise the Cronulla centre's drugs case,he has received support from the swimmer about enduring the anti-doping process.
While no love was lost when they first met,Swimming Australia CEO Leigh Russell,and Andrew,a high-performance director at AFL club Carlton,are now juggling three kids and very demanding careers.
The overseas-based attack has rattled the fragile 20-year-old,who is serving a four-year ban for testing positive to Ligandrol.
Shayna Jack will learn later this week when she will get her day in court as she prepares to appeal her four-year ban for testing positive to Ligandrol.
The waiting game continues for the 21-year-old as a new-look legal team prepares her for a last-ditch attempt at a reduction to her four-year ban.