The heats are on to find out the world’s fastest woman. And the preliminary findings show the current favourite American Sha’Carrie Richardson has not blown off the competition yet. Jamaican Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce, the 100-metre silver medal winner in Tokyo three years ago, is still in the race.
The 100-metre in Tokyo ended in an all-Jamaican podium finish with Elaine Thompson-Herah winning gold and Shericka Jackson clinching bronze. However, Thompson-Herah is not competing in Paris because of an Achilles tendon injury while Jackson pulled out of the 100-metre to focus on the 200-metre, her pet event, after being injured in a race in Hungary in July.
Queen in a da deck!!!!! The incomparable Shelly Ann Fraser Pryce🇯🇲🇯🇲🇯🇲🇯🇲🇯🇲🇯🇲🇯🇲🇯🇲🇯🇲 pic.twitter.com/pUpp0HdLk3
— J (@JordizzleJ) August 2, 2024
Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce
Fraser-Pryce is considered one of the greatest sprinters of all time. She boasts five world titles and won the 100-metre Olympic gold medal in Beijing in 2008 and London in 2012.
However, now 37 years old, can she hold off a young gun like Richardson?
The veteran, dubbed “Mommy Rocket”, isn’t done as yet.
This is her Olympic swan song, she says, and she aims to give of her best.
“It’s the final Olympic Games; let me repeat that,” Fraser-Pryce told journalists in Paris. “ I’m really looking forward to the experience, stepping on the track and always, once I get on the line, I’m giving 100 percent at all times and that’s what I’m looking forward to.”
Sha’Carri Richardson was on another level in her #ParisOlympics debut. 🔥 pic.twitter.com/XcpsvFKqHT
— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) August 2, 2024
Sha’Carri Richardson
Richardson, 24, is the reigning world champion and the fastest woman this year, having posted a 10.71 in June.
She is taking part in her first Olympics, and looking forward to the competition.
“To be at the Olympics is a phenomenal feeling,” Richardson said. “I’m super excited and eager to compete on the Olympic stage.”
She couldn’t take part in Tokyo as she was suspended after testing positive for marijuana. Raised by her grandmother and an aunt, she said she took the drug to cope with the news that her biological mother had died.
Richardson and Fraser-Pryce both qualified for the semi-finals.
Richardson ran 10.94 to win the first heat on Friday (August 2).
However, Fraser-Pryce set a better time, clocking 10.92 to finish second behind Marie Josee Ta Lou-Smith of Ivory Coast in the eighth and final heat.
Marie-Josee Ta Lou-Smith of Ivory Coast had the fastest time on Friday with 10.87, as she held off Fraser-Pryce down the home stretch in a thrilling final heat. She is hungry for a spot on the podium after fourth-place finishes in the last two Games.
Saint Lucia’s Julien Alfred, Canada’s Audrey Leduc, Poland’s Ewa Swoboda, the United States’ Twanisha Terry, Britain’s Daryll Neita and Dina Asher-Smith, Jamaica’s Tia Clayton and Shashalee Forbes and Gambia’s Gina Mariam Bass Bittaye are among the others who advanced to the semi-finals.