SHA’CARRI Richardson of the US celebrates after winning the 100 meter final during the US Olympic Team Track & Field Trials at Hayward Field.—AFP
SHA’CARRI Richardson of the US celebrates after winning the 100 meter final during the US Olympic Team Track & Field Trials at Hayward Field.—AFP

EUGENE: World 100 meters champion Sha’Carri Richardson earned a chance for Olympic redemption after winning the 100m at the US athletics trials on Saturday, booking her ticket to the Paris Games.

Three years after a positive marijuana test saw her kicked off the US team for the Tokyo Olympics, Richardson captured the women’s 100 final in 10.71sec with Melissa Jefferson second in 10.80 and Twanisha Terry third in 10.89.

Richardson surged to the lead in the middle of the race and crossed the finish line in this year’s world-best time with a wind of 0.8m/sec at Hayward Field in Eugene, Oregon.

“I feel honored,” Richardson said. “I feel every chapter I’ve been through in my life designed and prepared me for this moment. I cannot wait to go to Paris and represent.”

Richardson hopes to capture Olympic gold in the 100 final at the Stade de France on August 3.

Not since Gail Devers in 1996 has an American woman been crowned an Olympic 100m champion.

The 24-year-old Texan won her preliminary heat on Friday in 10.88, leading all qualifiers despite a slight stumble at the start, and won her Saturday semi-final in 10.86, the best time of any finalist despite a slow start.

She was behind again at the start but quickly made up the time and charged to victory.

“Definitely didn’t have the best start, but had a better start than my other rounds,” Richardson said.

Three years ago, Richardson appeared set for the pandemic-delayed Tokyo Olympics after winning at the US trials in 10.86.

But dreams of Olympic gold were shattered when it was revealed she had tested positive for marijuana, resulting in a one-month suspension that banned her from Tokyo.

Plans to revive her career at the 2022 World Cha­mpionships failed when she bombed out of the US trials.

Richardson, how­­ever, roared back into form in 2023 with a thrilling 100m triumph at the World Championships in Budapest, taking the crown in a championship record of 10.65sec.

This year, Richardson won her only prior 100 at May’s Prefontaine Classic in Eugene in 10.83.

Lyles cruised to victory in the first of five 100m men’s heats with Christian Coleman, the 2019 100m world champion, second in 9.99.

In the men’s shot put, two-time reigning Olympic champion Ryan Crouser won the chance to defend his crown with an effort of 22.84m.

“Surprised myself a little bit,” Crouser. “That’s a good sign.”

Joe Kovacs, the Rio and Tokyo Olympic runner-up to Crouser, was second at 22.43 to book his Paris trip as well.

Crouser, also the two-time reigning world champion, set the world record of 23.56m last year but has been nagged by injuries this year.

Other US trials wins went to Heath Baldwin in the decathlon and Jasmine Moore in the women’s triple jump.

Published in Dawn, June 24th, 2024

Opinion

Editorial

Controversial timing
Updated 05 Oct, 2024

Controversial timing

While the judgment undoes a past wrong, it risks being perceived as enabling a myopic political agenda.
ML-1’s prospects
05 Oct, 2024

ML-1’s prospects

ONE of the signature projects envisaged under the CPEC umbrella is the Mainline-1 railway scheme, which is yet to ...
No breathing space
05 Oct, 2024

No breathing space

THIS is the time of the year when city dwellers across Punjab start choking on toxic air. Soon the harmful air will...
High cost of living
Updated 04 Oct, 2024

High cost of living

There will be no let-up in the pain of middle-class people when it comes to grocery expenses, school fees, and hospital bills.
Regional response
04 Oct, 2024

Regional response

IT is welcome that Afghanistan’s neighbours are speaking with one voice when it comes to the critical issue of...
Cultural conservation
04 Oct, 2024

Cultural conservation

THE Sindh government’s recent move to declare the Sayad Hashmi Reference Library as a protected heritage site is...