Richardson didn't reel them in, then had to wait in the “hot seat” near the finish line for the final two heats to see if her time of 11 seconds flat would be one of the two fastest among the non-qualifiers.
She made it and reached the eight-woman final with a wild-card — the same way she qualified two years ago when she won the world title in Budapest. In the final that year, she ran out of Lane 9 and beat everyone.
This time, the task could be tougher. Richardson's 11.00 was her season best. That's .27 seconds slower than Melissa Jefferson-Wooden who posted the fastest semifinal time. Tina Clayton finished .17 seconds behind her.
Also making the final were Olympic champion Julien Alfred and Jamaica's five-time world champ, Shelly-Ann Fraser Pryce, who finished 1-2 in the second semifinal. Britain's Dina-Asher Smith ran 11.02 to earn the other wild-card spot.
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AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games