
Defending champion Richardson struggles into 100m world final

Defending champion Sha'Carri Richardson scraped into the 100 metres final at the World Athletics Championships on Sunday, qualifying as one of the two fastest losers.
The 25-year-old American rose from one of the two trackside seats reserved for the fastest losers, having sat through the other two semi-finals, and did an impression of aiming a fist at a punch bag.
Richardson, last year's Olympic silver medallist, had a dreadful start after receiving a warning for falling over the start line, but she fought her way into third spot to time 11.00sec.
Veteran Marie-Josee Ta Lou-Smith, a 100m world silver medallist in 2017, and Jamaica's Shericka Jackson, herself a two-time runner-up in the 100m final, took the automatic spots.
Neither of them looked as sublime as Olympic champion Julien Alfred, who eased to victory in her semi-final.
For five-time 100m world champion Shelly-Ann Fraser-Pryce there will be a last major individual championship final, as the 38-year-old Jamaican legend took second behind Alfred.
As Richardson gritted her teeth in the seat the eight runners in the third semi -- including teammate and the form sprinter of the season, American Melissa Jefferson-Wooden -- took to the blocks.
Jefferson-Wooden unlike Richardson made a dream start and the 24-year-old was easing down as she took the tape in 10.74sec with Jamaica's Tina Clayton finishing second.
Third-placed Dina Asher-Smith and Richardson, still seated, looked anxiously at the board until the latter rose to her feet when she saw 11.02sec come up.
Asher-Smith, the silver medallist in the 2019 world 100m final before winning the 200m gold, gave a shake of her head as she realised her going through was at the cost of British teammate Amy Hunt.
N.Hong--SG