Current:Home > NewsSha’Carri Richardson caps comeback by winning 100-meter title at worlds -Capitatum
Sha’Carri Richardson caps comeback by winning 100-meter title at worlds
View
Date:2025-04-15 20:29:29
BUDAPEST, Hungary (AP) — Track, and fame, can be brutal games. Nobody felt that more over the past two years than American sprinter Sha’Carri Richardson.
On a sultry Monday night a half-world away from where her problems began, the 23-year-old earned a gold medal at world championships in the biggest 100-meter race this side of the Olympics.
Her victory, in 10.65 seconds over Jamaicans Shericka Jackson and five-time world champion Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, capped a comeback two years in the making and made good on the mantra she’s been reciting all year — and repeated yet again after her latest victory: “I’m not back. I’m better.”
Two summers ago after Olympic trials in Eugene, Oregon, Richardson’s road to the Tokyo Games was roadblocked by a positive test for marijuana. Her name turned into a litmus test in a wide-ranging debate about race, fairness, the often-impenetrable anti-doping rulebook and, ultimately, about the sometimes razor-thin line between right and wrong.
Richardson said she soaked it all in, surrounded herself with supporters, tried to drown out the rest.
“I would say ‘never give up,’” she said when asked what message this victory sent. “Never allow media, never allow outsiders, never allow anything but yourself and your faith define who you are. I would say ‘Always fight. No matter what, fight.’”
For this victory, in a field featuring four of the eight fastest sprinters in history, she fought.
She fought when the vagaries of the track rulebook placed her in the so-called “Semifinal of Death,” paired against Jackson and Marie-Josée Ta Lou, who came in ranked fifth and eighth all-time, in a race where only the top two finishers were guaranteed spots in the final.
In that semifinal, Richardson got off to a wretched start and had to rally from seventh to finish third in 10.84. Her time was the fastest among all non-qualifiers, so she made it to the final.
A mere 70 minutes later, she was lining up on the edge of the track in Lane 9 for the gold-medal sprint, as tough a spot as there is because there’s no way to feel how the top contenders — or anyone, really — is doing.
It made no difference. Even though she had the third-slowest start in the field, nobody got too far ahead. In the end, it was a race between her and Jackson. Jackson crossed and, unable to track what Richardson was doing so far on the outside, looked up to the scoreboard as though she might have won.
But Richardson beat her by .07 seconds, Fraser-Pryce by .12 and Ta Lou by .16. The 10.65 was a world-championships record — Florence Griffith-Joyner’s 35-year-old world record of 10.49 still stands — and matched Jackson for the best time in the world this year.
Though Richardson came in 2-0 against Jackson in head-to-head matchups this year, she was still a 5-1 underdog in the race — in part because she was a rookie at worlds going against a field that had amassed 38 Olympic and world-championship medals between them.
The new champion looked stunned after she crossed the finish line. She blew a kiss toward the sky, cast her eyes on that beautiful scoreboard and walked toward the stands in a daze to accept the American flag and congratulations from Fraser-Pryce, Dina Asher-Smith of Britain and others.
“All the heavy hitters were going to bring their ‘A’ game, so it helped me pull out my best ‘A’ game, as well,” Richardson said. “I’m next to living legends. It feels remarkable.”
Richardson appeared ready to become America’s next sprint star when, with her orange hair flowing behind her, she cruised to a win at trials two years ago. But that victory quickly came off the books after she tested positive for marijuana — a doping violation she readily admitted, saying she was in a bad place after the recent death of her mom.
A raucous debate — a lot of it hashed out on social media — ensued over whether marijuana, not a performance enhancer, really belonged on the banned list (it’s still there), but also whether regulators were too keen to go after a young, outspoken, Black, American woman (they said everyone is subject to the same rules).
Richardson spiraled downward for a while, both off the track and on. She finished ninth in her much-hyped return from suspension at the Prefontaine Classic in 2021. Last year, she didn’t make the world championship team.
“A year ago, she was in no-man’s land, as far as not making the team,” said her agent, former hurdler Renaldo Nehemiah. “And then, to come back and finally find her happy place, which is on the track, and to not try to compete with any kind of negative influences out there. I personally told her, ‘You’ll never win that battle on your best day.’”
Late last summer, Richardson bared her soul in a live chat on social media, urging people to find their true selves, much the way she had done.
With that message sent, she went about fixing things on the track.
But when asked after her biggest victory what, exactly, she fixed, either on the track or off, she didn’t speak about technique, speed or tactics.
“You bring who you are onto the track. You bring your athlete into your life,” she said. “Just knowing that people know me not just as an athlete, but as a person. There is no separate, honestly.
“So I’m glad I can display who I really am. Not my pain. Not my sadness. I’m happy I can sit here and be happy with home, and just knowing that it all paid off.”
___
AP sports: https://apnews.com/sports
veryGood! (4751)
Related
- Organizers cancel Taylor Swift concerts in Vienna over fears of an attack
- Mets owner Steve Cohen 'focused on winning games,' not trade deadline
- Martha’s Vineyard is about to run out of pot. That’s led to a lawsuit and a scramble by regulators
- Trust your eyes, Carlos Alcaraz shows he really is a 'mega talent' in French Open victory
- Boy who wandered away from his 5th birthday party found dead in canal, police say
- Hunter Biden’s gun trial enters its final stretch after deeply personal testimony about his drug use
- Already 50? Here's how to build a million-dollar retirement from now.
- If your pet eats too many cicadas, when should you see the vet?
- Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
- United Airlines passengers to see targeted ads on seat-back screens
Ranking
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- Netflix to fight woman's claim of being inspiration behind Baby Reindeer stalker character
- Norwegian wealth fund to vote against Elon Musk’s Tesla pay package
- Ryan Garcia speaks out after being hospitalized following arrest at Beverly HIlls hotel
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- What to know about Indigenous activist Leonard Peltier’s first hearing in more than a decade
- A man shot by police in New Caledonia has died. The French Pacific territory remains restive
- Derrick White has game-changing blocked shot in Celtics' Game 2 win vs. Mavericks
Recommendation
Video shows dog chewing cellphone battery pack, igniting fire in Oklahoma home
The Latest | Far-right projected to make big gains as voting wraps on last day of EU elections
GameStop tanks almost 40% as 'Roaring Kitty' fails to spark enthusiasm
Ryan Garcia speaks out after being hospitalized following arrest at Beverly HIlls hotel
Illinois governor calls for resignation of sheriff whose deputy fatally shot Black woman in her home
Accused Las Vegas bank robber used iPad to display demand notes to tellers, reports say
Deontay Wilder's fiancée gets temporary restraining order after she details alleged abuse
Biden calls France our first friend and enduring ally during state visit in Paris