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U.S. Women’s Athlete Of The Year — Sha’Carri Richardson

U.S. Women’s Athlete Of The Year — Sha’Carri Richardson

“We cannot stop at world champion, but it is a nice beginning,” says Richardson. (JEFF COHEN)

NOT BACK BUT BETTER — it was a season of rebirth and resurgence for Sha’Carri Richardson, who stormed her way to the top of the WC podium in the 100 in a campaign that won her honors as our U.S. Women’s Athlete Of The Year.

Indeed, it’s not as if she returned from serious injury or time away from the sport. Rather, after a ’21 Olympic season that was marked by her dramatic victory at the Olympic Trials, a short-lived moment of triumph that was obviated 2 weeks later by a positive test finding for marijuana, Richardson surely felt like she had to establish herself all over again.

Her ’22 season, however, was one of frustration. Moments of extreme speed mingled with disappointment. She blistered dashes of 10.73w and 10.85 leading up to Nationals, then failed to make the finals in the 100 or the 200. She only broke 11 once more that year, a 10.93 in Brussels, but that was just good for 5th.

The ’23 campaign would be astonishingly different. Only once, in 16 efforts at 100, heats and finals, did she run slower than 11-flat. After a season-opener 4×1 leg at the Texas Relays, she put the world on notice in her first test in the 100, running a 10.75w heat and 10.57w final in Miramar, Florida, on April 08. A month later she got on the legal list with a 10.76 win at the Doha Diamond League. Suddenly, the 23-year-old Dallas native was back to being the woman to beat in the 100.

However, defeating Richardson proved difficult for her pursuers. At Nationals, she ripped through the first 2 rounds in 10.71 and 10.75. In the final, despite a weak start — often her Achilles heel — she tore the rest of the race with a fury, taking the lead with 40 to go and crossing the line looking more angry than jubilant. It would be her first berth on a global team.

She told NBC’s Lewis Johnson, “I’m ready, mentally physically and emotionally.”

Richardson made the team in the 200 as well. She came to Eugene with the season-best of 22.07 she set in Nairobi’s altitude. Quickly she put herself among the contenders with her windy 21.61 first round, a mark bettered in any conditions only by Florence Griffith-Joyner among Americans. In the final, she produced a PR 21.94 from lane 5, but was defeated by Gabby Thomas’s fast-finishing 21.60.

Between then and Budapest, she only raced twice. First came a 10.76 win at the Skolimowska Memorial in Poland. Then, at…

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