Sports

Richardson wins Stawell Gift from scratch

Sha'Carri ⁠Richardson
 
Sha'Carri ⁠Richardson

 American sprinter Sha'Carri ⁠Richardson powered to victory from the back of the ​field at Australia's ​oldest and richest handicap footrace, the Stawell Gift, on Monday.
The annual race, which offers a prize of A$40,000 ($27,628), is run on a 120m uphill grass track with athletes handicapped according to ability ⁠and previous performances in sprints.
Richardson, who won silver in ⁠the 100m at the Paris Olympics and was on the gold medal-winning U.S. 4x100 relay team, crossed the finish line with ‌an adjusted time of 13.15 ​seconds, ahead of ⁠Australian teenager Charlotte Nielsen.
Nielsen had a ​nine-metre head start on the ‌26-year-old Richardson, who qualified for the six-woman final after a photo finish ​in the semis.
'Thank you. The love, the support, the true enjoyment that I had on the track, I know everybody's having here. I had a great time,' Richardson told Channel ‌7.
Richardson became the third athlete to win the women's ​Gift from scratch since it was introduced in 1989, ​after ‌Bree ⁠Rizzo in 2025 and Melissa Breen in 2012.
In the men's event, Richardson's boyfriend and 2019 world 100m champion ​Christian Coleman failed to advance from ⁠the semi-finals, with ​Australia's Olufemi Komolafe winning the final.
The race has been run in the small Victorian town of Stawell every Easter weekend since 1878 except for four years ​during World War Two and in 2020, ​when the COVID pandemic forced its cancellation.