Photo: Patrick Smith/Getty Images
Sha’Carri Richardson is a track sensation for the United States, but she has faced major ups and downs in her athletic career.
In June 2021, she made national headlines after qualifying for the 2020 TokyoSummer Olympics(held in 2021 because of theCOVID-19pandemic), winning the women’s 100-meter race at the U.S. Olympic track and field trials in Eugene, Oregon. By clocking in at 10.86 seconds, Richardson secured her spot on Team USA at 21 years old,according toThe Washington Post.
However, she wassuspended for one month from the teamfor testing positive for THC, a chemical in marijuana, and ended upmissing the entire Olympics.
Patrick Smith/Getty Images
Though an initial hurdle in the sprinter’s career, Richardson went on to earn the title of the world’s fastest woman after she set a record time andplaced first in the 100-meter raceat the world track and field championshipsin Budapest, Hungary, in August 2023. Besting the lateTori Bowie, who previously held the record in 2017, Richardson became the second non-Jamaican world champion since Carmelita Jeter in 2011.
“You bring who you are onto the track. You bring your athlete into your life,” Richardson said when asked about her biggest victory during alive chat on Instagram(via CBS News). “Just knowing that people know me not just as an athlete, but as a person. There is no separate, honestly.”
So who is Sha’Carri Richardson? Here’s everything to know about the track superstar and her history-making journey.
Jamie Schwaberow/NCAA Photos via Getty Images
The Dallas native got her start in track at a young age.According to the Dallas Independent School District, Richardson was a standout athlete at Carter High School before attending Louisiana State University (LSU).
During her freshman year at LSU, she won the 2019 NCAA title in a college-record 10.75 seconds,per her official athlete bio. She also earned several awards and honors during her first year, including being named SEC freshman track athlete of the year and receiving the 2019 Bowerman award, the highest individual honor in collegiate track and field,noted the USTFCCA(U.S. Track & Field and Cross Country Coaches Association).
Richardson made it known that her family comes first — and that was clear during the June 2021 U.S. trials when she headed to hug her grandmother immediately after winning the women’s 100-meter race. She embraced her grandmother, who then kissed her forehead in a touching post-victory moment. Richardsontold NBC Sportsthat she’s been through a lot with her family and appreciates their constant support.
“My family has kept me grounded. This year has been crazy for me going from just last week losing my biological mother, and I’m still here,” she said during an interview after the race. “My biological mother passed away, and [I’m] still choosing to pursue my dreams, still coming out here, still making sure to make the family that I do still have on this earth proud.”
Richardson did not elaborate on the circumstances of the death of her biological mother, but did say that her family and coach were the only people who really knew what goes on in her life, and she expressed gratitude for them.
“Without them, there would be no me. Without my grandmother, there would be no Sha’Carri Richardson. My family is my everything — my everything until the day I’m done,” Richardson reportedly said.
NBC Olympics & Paralympics/Twitter
Richardson often runs in full glam on the track. The athlete has competed with long, colorful nails and vibrant hair, allowing her to stand out during the race.
According to the Olympics' official website, Richardson has said that her hair hue is a way of expressing herself.
“The color is based off how I want to feel,” she explained. “Like the red puts me in a very dominating mood. And, sometimes, I feel that can be overwhelming, so when I need to calm down, I have black hair. The black calms me and makes me blend in instead of being extra.
The track star continued, “The blonde is for when I’m going home to Texas. Or I’ll wear it when I am away from home and wanting to feel like home.”
“Y’all love talking about my hair & my nails like the greatest woman to ever enter the game didn’t run in style,” Richardsoncaptioned the post.
Though there wasn’t an Olympic hair and beauty surprise due to her suspension, Richardson has sported pink hair and green braids since, asshowcased on Instagram.
Ahead of her summer 2023 U.S. Track and Field Championships 100-meter sprint, shetook off her orange wigand raced with her natural hair braided and pulled back, revealing heart and star designs on the sides of her head.
John Sciulli/Getty; Patrick Smith/Getty; Jesse Grant/Getty
As a result of her one-month suspension from Team USA and being disqualified from the June 2021 Olympic trials after testing positive for THC, Richardson was unable to participate in the women’s 100-meter race.
“I am human,” sheposted on Twitter(now X) in July of that year.
Richardsonreceived a barrage of celebrity supportfrom fellow athletes, including soccer playerSydney Leroux, former NBA playerDwyane Wadeand track gold medalistMichael Johnson.
SkierGus Kenworthy tweeted, “Marijuana is NOT a performance enhancing drug,” while actorSeth Rogenchimed in on social mediathat racism and hatred is why weed is portrayed so negatively. Rogen added, “Also if weed made you fast, I’d be FloJo.”
In a July 2, 2021,interview onTodaywithSavannah Guthrie, Richardson opened up about her suspension: “I know what I did. I know what I’m supposed to do and what I’m allowed not to do, and I still made that decision. But I’m not making an excuse or looking for any empathy in my case.”
Sha’Carri Richardson Instagram
Months after not being able to participate in the Olympics, Richardson posted an Instagram Story where shecelebrated how far she had comethat year. She wrote tributes to loved ones and shared photos of herself with them.
“I thank y’all for teaching me the strength I never knew I had. I thank you for teaching me my value before I even knew it existed. I thank y’all for teaching me to live my truth yet understand my future. I thank you for teaching me not to want for anything and to work for everything,” she wrote. “To my babies I WILL NEVER STOP SO YALL CAN KEEP GOING. 2022 I don’t feel sorry for any of you.”
In February 2022, Richardson spoke candidly on how self-loved helped her to work through her suspension and what it means to be a Black woman in sports.
“That entire situation taught me to look into myself and to see thatI have to be groundedbecause do you see how fast they flip?” shetoldTeen Vogue, referring to people who change their perception of others — notably Black women — when a mistake is made.
“It almost seems like we have to be superheroes,” Richardson said. “It’s just irritating because you take away the abilities, you take away the speed, you take away the talent … and we’re still human.”
AP Photo/Ashley Landis
Though she placed ninth at the 2021 Prefontaine Classic — her first track appearance after the suspension and missing the Tokyo Olympics — and didn’t qualify for the 100-meter sprint at the 2022 World Championships, Richardson didn’t give up.
In July 2023, she finished first at the U.S. Track and Field Championships. The following month, she won the 100-meter race at the World Athletics Championships in 10.65 seconds —setting a record for the eventand earning the title of the fastest woman in the world.
“I’m not worried about the world anymore,” Richardson said. “I’ve seen the world be my friend. I’ve seen the world turn on me, but at the end of the day, I’ve always been with me. God has always been with me, so being on this scale now, it’s my time.”
And it was.
Michael Le Brecht/ABC via Getty Images
In November 2023, Richardson’s high school district, Dallas ISD, named the track at John E. Kincaide Stadium after her.
At the dedication ceremony, RichardsontoldThe Dallas Morning Newsshe was “speechless” and “this is one of those full-circle moments.”
“I hope this communicates not to just my community, but to the children, to the adults, that there is so much more,” she said. “Never forget where you come from. You want to use it as motivation.”
Richardson’s wishes are already coming to fruition. At the event, Carter High School track member LaMya Jordan said, per the newspaper, “It’s pretty inspiring, seeing someone who came from where I come from and doing things really big. It makes me want to go out and do the same.”
source: people.com