Sha’Carri Richardson has rediscovered top-end speed at the right moment, clocking 10.77 seconds in the 100m at the Star Athletics Sprint Series in Florida. It was her fastest time in two years and a sharp reminder of why she remains one of the most dangerous sprinters in the sport.
The former world champion backed into the blocks alongside two-time Olympic 400m champion Shaunae Miller-Uibo and finished well clear of the field. Miller-Uibo took second in 11.05, while U.S. sprinter Melicia Mouzzon placed third in 11.14.
A return to her best mark
Richardson’s 10.77 matched the time she ran in June 2022 when she won the U.S. Olympic Trials. According to www.olympics.com, the result is her fastest since that performance and the second-fastest women’s 100m time this season.
The only quicker mark this season is the 10.63 national record set by Adaejah Hodge of the British Virgin Islands in the preliminaries at the 2026 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships in Eugene, Oregon.
Why the run matters now
The performance stands out because Richardson had a muted 2025 season, breaking the sub-11-second barrier only once. She closed that year with a fifth-place finish in the women’s 100m final at the 2025 World Athletics Championships, running 10.94.
That race was won by compatriot Melissa Jefferson-Wooden in 10.61, underlining the depth of the U.S. sprint scene. Richardson has already shown a stronger start to 2026, opening her outdoor campaign by winning the 100m at the LA Grand Prix in Los Angeles.
She won there in 10.99, ahead of Kayla White in 11.08 and Tamari Davis in 11.11. The latest result suggests her early-season momentum is building after a year that fell below her usual standard.
Context around the season’s leading times
| Athlete | Time | Event context |
|---|---|---|
| Adaejah Hodge | 10.63 | 2026 NCAA Division I Outdoor Track and Field Championships preliminaries |
| Sha’Carri Richardson | 10.77 | Star Athletics Sprint Series in Florida |
| Melissa Jefferson-Wooden | 10.61 | 2025 World Athletics Championships final |
Richardson’s latest run does not change the season leaderboard, but it does tighten the conversation around the women’s 100m. After a slow 2025 and a steady opening to 2026, she has put herself back near the center of the sprint picture.
The result also arrived against a notable line-up, with Miller-Uibo’s 11.05 ranking as the third-fastest time of her career. For Richardson, the message was simpler: her speed is back within striking distance of the top times.