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Wikipedia

Sanya Richards-Ross

Sanya Richards-Ross (née Richards; born February 26, 1985[1]) is a retired Jamaican-American track and field athlete, who competed internationally for the United States in the 400-meter sprint. Her notable accolades in this event include being the 2012 Olympic champion, 2009 world champion, 2008 Olympic bronze medalist, and 2005 world silver medalist. With her victory in 2012, she became the second American woman to win the 400 meters at the Olympic Games and the first American woman to earn multiple global 400-meter titles.[2][3] At this distance, Richards-Ross is also a six-time U.S. national champion (2003, 2005, 2006, 2008, 2009, and 2012).

Sanya Richards-Ross
Richards-Ross at the 2012 Summer Olympics
Personal information
Born (1985-02-26) February 26, 1985 (age 38)
Kingston, Jamaica
Height5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)
Weight137 lb (62 kg)
Sport
CountryUnited States
SportTrack and field
Event(s)400 m
Achievements and titles
Personal best(s)400m: 48.70 (2006, NR)
Medal record

A formidable competitor throughout her career, Richards-Ross ranked number one in the world from 2005 to 2009 and again in 2012 in the 400 meters.[4][5] She set the American 400-meter record of 48.70 seconds in 2006 and was named the IAAF 2006 Female World Athlete of the Year, an honor she received again in 2009.[6] Richards-Ross also holds the record for the most sub-50 second sprints in the history of the event, with a career total of 49 times.[7] In addition to her individual achievements, she won three consecutive Olympic gold medals in the 4 × 400 meters relay at the 2004, 2008, and 2012 Summer Olympics, as well as five total relay medals from multiple World Athletics Championships.

Following an injury at the 2016 U.S. Olympic trials, Richards-Ross retired from the sport and subsequently joined the NBC broadcasting team as a track and field analyst.[8] She published her memoir Chasing Grace: What the Quarter Mile has Taught Me about God and Life in 2017.[9]

In October 2021, Bravo announced that Richards-Ross was joining the fourteenth season of The Real Housewives of Atlanta.[10]

Early life edit

Richards-Ross was born on February 26, 1985, in Kingston, Jamaica to Archie and Sharon Richards. She began running at the age of seven and represented her school Vaz Prep in annual youth championships. When Richards-Ross was twelve years old, her family immigrated to Fort Lauderdale, Florida, so that she could attend an American high school, increasing her chances of obtaining an athletic scholarship to an American university.[11] Richards-Ross was a 2002 graduate of St. Thomas Aquinas High School, where she finished with a cumulative 4.0 GPA and was pegged the 2002 Gatorade National High School Girls Track and Field Athlete of the Year and also the USA Track and Field Youth Athlete of the Year.[12][13] At Aquinas, she was a nine-time individual state champion with four 100-meter titles, three 200-meter titles, one 400-meter title and one long jump title.[14][15]

Richards-Ross attended the University of Texas, Austin in 2002 and graduated in 2005, majoring in business and starring on the women's track and field team.[16]

Career edit

2003–2005 edit

Representing the University of Texas in 2003, Richards-Ross became the first freshman to win the NCAA national championship in the 400 meters and the 4 × 400 meters relay. Her victory in 400 meters set the then American U20 record of 50.58 seconds.[17] Later that June, at eighteen years old, the freshman Longhorn claimed her first senior national title by winning the 400 meters in 51.01 seconds at the 2003 U.S. national championships and qualified for the 2003 Paris World Championships. In Paris, she finished fourth in her 400 meters semi-final and did not move on to the final. However, Richards-Ross still came home with a gold medal in the 4 × 400 meters relay after anchoring Team USA to a victory.

Richards-Ross qualified for her first Olympic team by running 49.89 seconds to place second in the 400 meters at the 2004 U.S. Olympic trials. In the 2004 Olympic 400 meters final, Richards-Ross finished sixth with a time of 50.19 seconds, behind her two American compatriots DeeDee Trotter and Monique Hennagan, who both missed the podium as well. The American women sought redemption from their disappointing run by winning gold in the 4 × 400 meters relay, days later.[18] After leaving Athens, Richards-Ross forwent her college eligibility at Texas, competing as a Nike-sponsored athlete and training under the then head track and field coach of Baylor University, Clyde Hart.[19]

At the 2005 Helsinki World Championships, 20-year-old Richards-Ross failed to maintain the lead coming off the second curve in the 400 meters final and was passed by the 2004 Olympic champion Tonique Williams-Darling of the Bahamas, who won with a season's best of 49.55 seconds. Richards-Ross attributed the difficult loss to her inexperience as a young professional athlete, fixating on beating her main competitor before the final 100 meters instead of trusting her established race strategy.[20] Reverting to her predetermined race plan, she dipped under 49 seconds for the first time with a personal best of 48.92 seconds, the fastest time in the world that year, in Zürich, a race that also featured the newly crowned world champion Williams-Darling.[21]

2006–2008 edit

Pursuit of the American 400 meters record, set at 48.83 seconds by Valerie Brisco-Hooks, became Richards-Ross' goal of the 2006 season.[22] Leading into the World Cup race in Athens, the American woman was on a dominant win-streak and held the world-leading time of 49.05 seconds. She finished the World Cup race in 48.70 seconds, replacing Brisco-Hooks as the new American record holder in the 400 meters.[23] At the time, this personal best ranked her as the seventh-fastest woman ever at the distance. Richards-Ross and her training partner Jeremy Wariner were awarded the 2006 Jesse Owens Award by USA Track and Field after both were undefeated for the entire season and each won their $250,000 portion of the IAAF Golden League.[24] Athletes who win all six Golden League meets in an event claim a share of the $1 million jackpot.[25]

 
Richards-Ross with the U.S. relay team at the 2007 Osaka World Championships

For the 2007 season, Richards-Ross decided to expand her résumé, racing more 200-meter sprints and testing her ability to possibly pursue the rare 200–400 meters double Olympic victory in Beijing the following year.[26] Only a handful of athletes have ever achieved such a feat, including Michael Johnson, her coach Clyde Hart's world-record-setting pupil. Things strayed from her plan, as she finished fourth in the 400 meters event at the 2007 U.S. national championships, only qualifying for the 2007 Osaka World Championships by placing second in the 200 meters, behind reigning 200 meters world champion Allyson Felix. In Osaka, Richards-Ross ran 22.70 seconds to finish fifth, as teammate Felix successfully defended her title from two years ago.[27] Both American women reunited for the women's 4 × 400 meters relay, helping Team USA win gold, ahead of the Jamaican team and the British team, which featured the new 400 meters world champion Christine Ohuruogu and 400 meters silver medalist Nicola Sanders. Despite failing to qualify in her signature event at the national championships and leaving Osaka with only a spectator's memory of the individual race, the 23-year-old American woman still finished the year undefeated in the six Golden League 400-meter races and with the number one world ranking.[28] Reflecting on her season, she admitted that losing focus on the quarter-mile race was the reason for her defeat, after constantly shifting mindsets and strategies to race the 100, 200, and 400 meters throughout the season.[29]

Coming into 2008, despite being among the most prolific sub-50 second 400-meter sprinters of the decade, Richards-Ross had yet to win any individual world or Olympic title. Up until then, the young athlete had run a total of 27 races below the 50-second barrier.[30] After winning the 2008 U.S. Olympic trials, Richards-Ross was favored to win gold at the 2008 Beijing Olympics. However, in Beijing, the heavy favorite faltered, coming off the curve with a huge lead and having nothing left to come home. She held on for the bronze medal as Christine Ohuruogu of Great Britain and Shericka Williams of Jamaica surged ahead.[31] Richards-Ross later avenged her individual loss by making up a ten-meter deficit in the women's 4 × 400 meters relay and catching the Russian sprinter on the anchor leg right before the finish line, allowing Team USA to win by a 0.28-second margin.

Throughout her entire sporting career, Richards-Ross answered questions regarding the 2008 Olympic 400 meters race with self-described half-truths, attributing her loss to a sudden right hamstring injury, lack of sleep, or fate.[32] In her 2017 memoir Chasing Grace: What the Quarter Mile Taught Me about God and Life, she finally revealed the underlying reason for her disappointing loss at the 2008 Olympics; one month before the Games, Richards-Ross discovered that she was pregnant and decided to terminate the pregnancy the day before leaving for Beijing.[33] A devout Christian woman and a world-class athlete at the prime of her career, she endured much physical and emotional turmoil following her difficult decision, even into the 2008 Olympics, as explicated in the book: "I made a decision that broke me, and one from which I would not immediately heal from. Abortion would now forever be a part of my life. A scarlet letter I never thought I'd wear."[34]

2009–2011 edit

With the echoes of her Beijing loss still lingering into 2009, Richards-Ross began working with a sports psychologist, at the urging of coach Clyde Hart, to overcome her bouts of anxiety and emotional anguish.[35][36] Her efforts on the track coupled with her mental preparation made a difference as the 2009 season became her most successful to date. Richards-Ross won the 400 meters U.S. national title in 50.05 seconds, 0.74 seconds over second-place finisher Debbie Dunn, and qualified for the 2009 Berlin World Championships. In Berlin, she won her first global 400 meters title by dominating the 400 meters final from start to finish, winning in 49.00 seconds and proving to her critics that she could perform on the sport's biggest stages. The newly crowned world champion then anchored Team USA to a gold medal in the women's 4 × 400 meters relay. The winning time of 3.17.83 minutes was the sixth-fastest time in history, up until then, with Richards-Ross unofficially splitting 48.43 seconds on her anchor leg.[37]

 
Richards-Ross celebrating her victory at the 2009 Berlin World Championships

Upon leaving Berlin, Richards-Ross returned to the track to continue her 2009 IAAF Golden League win streak. In addition to winning the Berlin meet in 49.57 seconds, Oslo in 49.23 seconds, Rome in 49.46 seconds, and Paris in 49.34 seconds, all before the world championships, she claimed victory again in the last two Golden League meets in Zürich and Brussels, with times of 48.94 seconds and 48.83 seconds, respectively.[38] This was her third time sweeping the IAAF Golden League meets, a feat she accomplished in 2006 and 2007 as well, allowing her to once again earn a share of the $1 million jackpot.[39] After a 49.95-second win in the 400 meters IAAF World Athletics Final meet, she broke Marita Koch's record for the most career sub-50 second performances, surpassing Koch's total of 35 with her own total of 41.[40][41][42] Her only defeat this season, in any event, was to the now three-time defending 200-meter world champion Allyson Felix at the IAAF World Athletics Final in the 200 meters, with the victor discerned via photo finish and Richards-Ross declared second in an identical time of 22.29 seconds.[43][44] To cap off the successful season, the 24-year-old American woman, along with Usain Bolt, were named the 2009 IAAF World Athlete of Year.[45]

The next two outdoor seasons, however, proved to be difficult and disappointing for the defending world champion. A quad injury right before the 2010 Penn Relays forced Richards-Ross to prematurely end her 2010 season to rest and regroup.[46] She bounced back in 2011 to run a 49.66-second 400 meters race at the London Diamond League meet, just prior to the 2011 Daegu World Championships, sparking some optimism of rounding back into top form in time for the major competition.[47] In Daegu, Richards-Ross struggled to find her rhythm as she narrowly qualified for the 400 meters final and then wounded up seventh in a time of 51.32 seconds. She later returned in the 4 × 400 meters relay, this time running the lead-off leg in 49.1 seconds and setting the U.S. women up for victory.

2012 edit

Road to London edit

 
Richards-Ross racing at the 2012 Istanbul World Indoor Championships

Healthy and well-rested, Richards-Ross began her 2012 quest for the coveted individual Olympic gold medal by racing a full indoor schedule to warm up for her outdoor debut.[48] With four wins in four indoor races under her belt coming into the 2012 IAAF World Indoor Championships, she secured a resounding 400-meter victory in Istanbul with a time of 50.79 seconds, 0.97 seconds ahead of the Russian runner-up.[49] Her first indoor world title ushered in some much-needed confidence as the outdoor season began. Richards-Ross decisively won the 400-meter final at the 2012 U.S. Olympic trials, tying the Olympic trials record of 49.28 seconds and earning a berth to her third consecutive Olympics.[50] Longtime teammate DeeDee Trotter and the 2011 world bronze medalist Francena McCorory finished second and third, respectively, and joined her on the 400 meters team. Later at the trials, Richards-Ross also finished third in the 200-meter sprint in 22.22 seconds, allowing her to attempt the rare 200 meter-400 meter double at the 2012 London Olympics.[51]

Once again, heading into the Olympic Games as the 400-meter favorite, she shouldered the same pressure and expectations, but this time, Richards-Ross was prepared to maintain her serenity amidst the vortex.[52] Stiff competition lined up for the 400 meters final in London, including the defending 2008 Olympic champion Christine Ohuruogu of Great Britain, 2011 world champion Amantle Montsho of Botswana, and Antonina Krivoshapka of Russia, who held the world-leading time of 49.16 seconds.[53] From the sound of the gun, Richards-Ross executed a race opposite of the one four years ago, pushing hard out of the blocks before relaxing into a comfortable stride down the backstretch and entering the homestretch in the third position, behind Krivoshapka and DeeDee Trotter.[54] The U.S. champion willed her legs to pull ahead of the field with fifty meters left of the race and in the final moments, which almost mirrored the 2008 race in Beijing as Ohuruogu closed down quickly on the leading American, Richards-Ross held on to win in 49.55 seconds, finally earning the gold medal that had long eluded her.[55] This victory became the first time an American woman had won the event in 28 years, since Valerie Brisco-Hooks in 1984.[56] Despite a fifth-place finish later in the 200 meters final, the newly crowned Olympic champion concluded the Games by running 49.1 seconds on the anchor leg of the victorious U.S. women's 4 × 400 meters relay team and left London with two gold medals.[57][58]

Opposition to Rule 40 edit

 
Richards-Ross celebrating at the 2012 Olympic Games

Throughout the Olympic season, Richards-Ross had appeared at the forefront of an athlete-driven #WeDemandChange movement advocating against the International Olympic Committee's (IOC) controversial Rule 40, a regulation that forbids Olympic athletes and coaches from acknowledging personal, non-Olympic sponsors by name, wearing additional logos on apparel, or promoting them on social media two weeks before or during the Olympic Games.[59] The rule strived to prevent ambush marketing and concentrate viewer attention on messages from official Olympic sponsors, such as Coca-Cola and Visa, which had paid a hefty amount for exclusive partnerships with the Games, although none of the multi-billion dollar revenue trickled into athletes' pockets.[60] Prior to the London Olympics, she sparked a discussion on the topic, tweeting, "With $6 billion exchanging hands during the Olympics why do the athletes compete for free?!? #QuestionsThatNeedAnswers #WeDemandChange."[61] Since track and field professionals earn the vast majority of their income through sponsorship deals, Rule 40 prevents them from thanking personal sponsors for their endorsement and also dissuades potential non-Olympic sponsors from investing in these athletes when the sport is receiving the most attention.[62]

Starting on July 29, 2012, a group of U.S. track and field athletes, including Trey Hardee, Bernard Lagat, Nick Symmonds, and Dawn Harper-Nelson, coordinated a Twitter campaign to criticize the restriction on athletes' rights, posting messages with hashtags #WeDemandChange, #Rule40, and #WeDemandChange2012.[63] Richards-Ross spoke at a news conference regarding the #WeDemandChange campaign on the following day and explained that although she was fortunate to have secured major sponsorships to continue her training and treatment, many athletes have to work two or three jobs to be able to afford to stay in the sport.[64] Answering conference reporters, she said, "I’ve been very fortunate to do very well around the Olympics, but so many of my peers struggle in the sport, and I think it's unjust that they're not being considered, that athletes are not part of the conversation." At the Olympic Village in London, Richards-Ross helped organize a group of track and field athletes to share their concerns, further their message to the IOC, and discuss potential regulation amendments to accommodate the athletes, with several options including permission to post sponsors on social media, clearance to wear non-Olympic sponsor logos, and IOC-funded prize money.[65] Efforts by these track and field athletes, along with later campaigns voicing Olympic athletes' discontent, finally pushed to the IOC to slightly amend Rule 40 for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, allowing athletes to promote personal sponsors and appear in their advertisements during the Games, within specific guidelines.[66]

2015–Retirement edit

Following two surgeries to correct a persistent toe problem, Richards-Ross injured her calf muscle right before the 2015 U.S. national championships, which lead her to finish fifth in her semi-final and prevent her from qualifying for the 2015 Beijing World Championships.[67][68] Despite not making the individual team, the track veteran was still selected to be on the women's 4 × 400 meters relay in Beijing. There, she ran a 51.5-second leg to help the United States team win silver.[69] Richards-Ross admitted later that overtraining, as she was approaching the closing stages of her career, might have contributed to the rapid decline in the latter part of the season.[70]

2016 began with the official announcement of her retirement by the end of the track season.[71] Still in recovery from a third toe surgery, the reigning 400-meter Olympic champion suffered an injury to her right hamstring at the 2016 U.S. Olympic trials, prompting her to discontinue the race and salute the Hayward Field crowd one last time.[72][73] Shortly after retiring, Richards-Ross joined the NBC broadcasting team as a track and field analyst for major events, such as the 2016 and 2020 Summer Olympics.[74]

Personal life edit

While attending the University of Texas, Richards-Ross began dating Longhorn football cornerback Aaron Ross, who later played for the New York Giants in the NFL.[75][76] The two were engaged in 2007 and married in 2010.[77] Their wedding was featured on an episode of Platinum Weddings.[78] The pair welcomed their first child, Aaron Jermaine Ross II, in 2017, and announced in July 2023 that they were expecting their second child, later revealed to be a boy in September 2023.[79]

For five years, Richards-Ross suffered from severe onsets of mouth ulcers, joint aches, and full-body skin lesions, which in 2007, doctors initially thought were caused by a rare, chronic disease involving the inflammation of blood vessels called Behçet's disease.[80][81] She began donning compression arm sleeves in competition to hide her ulcerated skin, but as a fashion enthusiast, later embraced the extra garment as part of her trademark look.[82]

Exploring new opportunities off the track, in 2013, Richards-Ross premiered her WE tv reality TV show Glam and Gold, a docu-series that followed her as she juggled appearances, ran businesses, trained for the track season, and balanced life with her husband and family.[83] Primarily shot at their home in Austin, the series also visited Florida, New York, and Jamaica, where she took Team SRR for an Olympic victory lap and celebration.[84]

Achievements edit

Competition record edit

Year Competition Venue Position Event Notes
Representing the   United States
2002 World Junior Championships Kingston, Jamaica 3rd 200m 23.09 (wind: -0.2 m/s)
2nd 400m 51.49
3rd (h)[85] 4 × 400 m relay 3:35.84
2003 World Championships Paris, France 11th (sf) 400 m 51.32
1st 4 × 400 m relay 3:22.63
2004 Olympic Games Athens, Greece 6th 400 m 50.19
1st 4 × 400 m relay 3:19.01
2005 World Championships Helsinki, Finland 2nd 400 m 49.74
World Athletics Final Monaco 1st 400 m 49.52
2006 World Indoor Championships Moscow, Russia 9th (sf) 400 m 52.46
World Athletics Final Stuttgart, Germany 2nd 200 m 22.17
1st 400 m 49.25
World Cup Athens, Greece 1st 400 m 48.70
1st 200 m 22.23
2007 World Championships Osaka, Japan 5th 200 m 22.70
1st 4 × 400 m relay 3:18.55
2008 Olympic Games Beijing, China 3rd 400 m 49.93
1st 4 × 400 m relay 3:18.54
2009 World Championships Berlin, Germany 1st 400m 49.00
1st 4 × 400 m relay 3:17.83
2011 World Championships Daegu, South Korea 7th 400 m 51.32
1st 4 × 400 m relay 3:18.09
2012 World Indoor Championships Istanbul, Turkey 1st 400 m 50.79
2nd 4 × 400 m relay 3:28.79
Olympic Games London, United Kingdom 5th 200 m 22.39
1st 400 m 49.55
1st 4 × 400 m relay 3:16.88
2014 World Relay Championships Nassau, Bahamas 1st 4 × 400 m relay 3:21.73
2015 World Relay Championships Nassau, Bahamas 1st Distance medley relay 10:36.50 (WR)
1st 4 × 400 m relay 3:19.39
World Championships Beijing, China 2nd 4 × 400 m relay 3:19.44

National titles edit

  • Six-time national 400 meters champion – 2003 (51.01), 2005 (49.28), 2006 (49.27), 2008 (49.89), 2009 (50.05), 2012 (49.28)

Personal bests edit

Event Time (seconds) Venue Date
60 meters 7.21 Lincoln, Nebraska, United States February 28, 2004
100 meters 10.97* Shanghai, China September 28, 2007
200 meters 22.09 New York City, USA June 8, 2012
400 meters 48.70 – National Record Athens, Greece September 16, 2006

Diamond League wins edit

  • 2011 – London (400m)
  • 2012 – Eugene (400m), New York (200m), Stockholm (400m), Zurich (400m)

References edit

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  74. ^ Acosta, Amelia (21 April 2021). "You cannot separate your human experience from your sporting success: A conversation with Sanya Richards-Ross". NBC Sports. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  75. ^ "Perfect match: Track star girlfriend pushes Ross". ESPN.com. 2 April 2007. Retrieved 4 November 2018.
  76. ^ Townsend, Brad (2008-08-19). "Sanya Richards: More than snake-bitten". Dallas Morning News. Retrieved 2008-08-19<!—None-->{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: postscript (link)
  77. ^ Mallozzi, Vincent (4 March 2010). "Sanya Richards and Aaron Ross". The New York Times. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  78. ^ . Wetv.com. 2011-02-25. Archived from the original on 2011-04-27. Retrieved 2011-09-03.
  79. ^ Juris, Yvonne. "Aaron and Sanya Richards-Ross Welcome Son Aaron Jermaine II". People. Retrieved 6 September 2021.
  80. ^ Kessel, Anna (22 May 2010). "'To go from being healthy to having this very rare disease was scary'". The Guardian. Retrieved 11 September 2021.
  81. ^ Slater, Matt. "London 2012: Diagnosis boost for Sanya Richards-Ross". BBC Sport. Retrieved 11 September 2021.
  82. ^ Elliott, Helene (27 June 2012). "Sanya Richards-Ross has visions of gold". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 11 September 2021.
  83. ^ . Archived from the original on 2013-08-20. Retrieved 2013-06-19.
  84. ^ "Sanya's Glam and Gold: Official Press Release". Retrieved 4 November 2018.
  85. ^ Competed only in the heat.
  86. ^ "Profile: Sanya Richards-Ross". World Athletics. Retrieved 9 September 2021.

External links edit

  • Official Website
  • World Athletics Profile – Sanya Richards-Ross
  • USA Track & Field Profile – Sanya Richards-Ross

sanya, richards, ross, née, richards, born, february, 1985, retired, jamaican, american, track, field, athlete, competed, internationally, united, states, meter, sprint, notable, accolades, this, event, include, being, 2012, olympic, champion, 2009, world, cha. Sanya Richards Ross nee Richards born February 26 1985 1 is a retired Jamaican American track and field athlete who competed internationally for the United States in the 400 meter sprint Her notable accolades in this event include being the 2012 Olympic champion 2009 world champion 2008 Olympic bronze medalist and 2005 world silver medalist With her victory in 2012 she became the second American woman to win the 400 meters at the Olympic Games and the first American woman to earn multiple global 400 meter titles 2 3 At this distance Richards Ross is also a six time U S national champion 2003 2005 2006 2008 2009 and 2012 Sanya Richards RossRichards Ross at the 2012 Summer OlympicsPersonal informationBorn 1985 02 26 February 26 1985 age 38 Kingston JamaicaHeight5 ft 8 in 1 73 m Weight137 lb 62 kg SportCountryUnited StatesSportTrack and fieldEvent s 400 mAchievements and titlesPersonal best s 400m 48 70 2006 NR Medal record Women s athleticsRepresenting United StatesEvent 1st 2nd 3rdOlympic Games 4 0 1World Championships 5 2 0World Indoor Championships 1 1 0Total 10 3 1Olympic Games2004 Athens 4 400 m relay2008 Beijing 4 400 m relay2012 London 400 m2012 London 4 400 m relay2008 Beijing 400 mWorld Championships2003 Paris 4 400 m relay2007 Osaka 4 400 m relay2009 Berlin 400 m2009 Berlin 4 400 m relay2011 Daegu 4 400 m relay2005 Helsinki 400 m2015 Beijing 4 400 m relayWorld Indoor Championships2012 Istanbul 400 m2012 Istanbul 4 400 m relayWorld Relays2014 Nassau 4 400 m relay2015 Nassau Distance medley relay2015 Nassau 4 400 m relayA formidable competitor throughout her career Richards Ross ranked number one in the world from 2005 to 2009 and again in 2012 in the 400 meters 4 5 She set the American 400 meter record of 48 70 seconds in 2006 and was named the IAAF 2006 Female World Athlete of the Year an honor she received again in 2009 6 Richards Ross also holds the record for the most sub 50 second sprints in the history of the event with a career total of 49 times 7 In addition to her individual achievements she won three consecutive Olympic gold medals in the 4 400 meters relay at the 2004 2008 and 2012 Summer Olympics as well as five total relay medals from multiple World Athletics Championships Following an injury at the 2016 U S Olympic trials Richards Ross retired from the sport and subsequently joined the NBC broadcasting team as a track and field analyst 8 She published her memoir Chasing Grace What the Quarter Mile has Taught Me about God and Life in 2017 9 In October 2021 Bravo announced that Richards Ross was joining the fourteenth season of The Real Housewives of Atlanta 10 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 2003 2005 2 2 2006 2008 2 3 2009 2011 2 4 2012 2 4 1 Road to London 2 4 2 Opposition to Rule 40 2 5 2015 Retirement 3 Personal life 4 Achievements 4 1 Competition record 4 2 National titles 4 3 Personal bests 4 4 Diamond League wins 5 References 6 External linksEarly life editRichards Ross was born on February 26 1985 in Kingston Jamaica to Archie and Sharon Richards She began running at the age of seven and represented her school Vaz Prep in annual youth championships When Richards Ross was twelve years old her family immigrated to Fort Lauderdale Florida so that she could attend an American high school increasing her chances of obtaining an athletic scholarship to an American university 11 Richards Ross was a 2002 graduate of St Thomas Aquinas High School where she finished with a cumulative 4 0 GPA and was pegged the 2002 Gatorade National High School Girls Track and Field Athlete of the Year and also the USA Track and Field Youth Athlete of the Year 12 13 At Aquinas she was a nine time individual state champion with four 100 meter titles three 200 meter titles one 400 meter title and one long jump title 14 15 Richards Ross attended the University of Texas Austin in 2002 and graduated in 2005 majoring in business and starring on the women s track and field team 16 Career edit2003 2005 edit Representing the University of Texas in 2003 Richards Ross became the first freshman to win the NCAA national championship in the 400 meters and the 4 400 meters relay Her victory in 400 meters set the then American U20 record of 50 58 seconds 17 Later that June at eighteen years old the freshman Longhorn claimed her first senior national title by winning the 400 meters in 51 01 seconds at the 2003 U S national championships and qualified for the 2003 Paris World Championships In Paris she finished fourth in her 400 meters semi final and did not move on to the final However Richards Ross still came home with a gold medal in the 4 400 meters relay after anchoring Team USA to a victory Richards Ross qualified for her first Olympic team by running 49 89 seconds to place second in the 400 meters at the 2004 U S Olympic trials In the 2004 Olympic 400 meters final Richards Ross finished sixth with a time of 50 19 seconds behind her two American compatriots DeeDee Trotter and Monique Hennagan who both missed the podium as well The American women sought redemption from their disappointing run by winning gold in the 4 400 meters relay days later 18 After leaving Athens Richards Ross forwent her college eligibility at Texas competing as a Nike sponsored athlete and training under the then head track and field coach of Baylor University Clyde Hart 19 At the 2005 Helsinki World Championships 20 year old Richards Ross failed to maintain the lead coming off the second curve in the 400 meters final and was passed by the 2004 Olympic champion Tonique Williams Darling of the Bahamas who won with a season s best of 49 55 seconds Richards Ross attributed the difficult loss to her inexperience as a young professional athlete fixating on beating her main competitor before the final 100 meters instead of trusting her established race strategy 20 Reverting to her predetermined race plan she dipped under 49 seconds for the first time with a personal best of 48 92 seconds the fastest time in the world that year in Zurich a race that also featured the newly crowned world champion Williams Darling 21 2006 2008 editPursuit of the American 400 meters record set at 48 83 seconds by Valerie Brisco Hooks became Richards Ross goal of the 2006 season 22 Leading into the World Cup race in Athens the American woman was on a dominant win streak and held the world leading time of 49 05 seconds She finished the World Cup race in 48 70 seconds replacing Brisco Hooks as the new American record holder in the 400 meters 23 At the time this personal best ranked her as the seventh fastest woman ever at the distance Richards Ross and her training partner Jeremy Wariner were awarded the 2006 Jesse Owens Award by USA Track and Field after both were undefeated for the entire season and each won their 250 000 portion of the IAAF Golden League 24 Athletes who win all six Golden League meets in an event claim a share of the 1 million jackpot 25 nbsp Richards Ross with the U S relay team at the 2007 Osaka World ChampionshipsFor the 2007 season Richards Ross decided to expand her resume racing more 200 meter sprints and testing her ability to possibly pursue the rare 200 400 meters double Olympic victory in Beijing the following year 26 Only a handful of athletes have ever achieved such a feat including Michael Johnson her coach Clyde Hart s world record setting pupil Things strayed from her plan as she finished fourth in the 400 meters event at the 2007 U S national championships only qualifying for the 2007 Osaka World Championships by placing second in the 200 meters behind reigning 200 meters world champion Allyson Felix In Osaka Richards Ross ran 22 70 seconds to finish fifth as teammate Felix successfully defended her title from two years ago 27 Both American women reunited for the women s 4 400 meters relay helping Team USA win gold ahead of the Jamaican team and the British team which featured the new 400 meters world champion Christine Ohuruogu and 400 meters silver medalist Nicola Sanders Despite failing to qualify in her signature event at the national championships and leaving Osaka with only a spectator s memory of the individual race the 23 year old American woman still finished the year undefeated in the six Golden League 400 meter races and with the number one world ranking 28 Reflecting on her season she admitted that losing focus on the quarter mile race was the reason for her defeat after constantly shifting mindsets and strategies to race the 100 200 and 400 meters throughout the season 29 Coming into 2008 despite being among the most prolific sub 50 second 400 meter sprinters of the decade Richards Ross had yet to win any individual world or Olympic title Up until then the young athlete had run a total of 27 races below the 50 second barrier 30 After winning the 2008 U S Olympic trials Richards Ross was favored to win gold at the 2008 Beijing Olympics However in Beijing the heavy favorite faltered coming off the curve with a huge lead and having nothing left to come home She held on for the bronze medal as Christine Ohuruogu of Great Britain and Shericka Williams of Jamaica surged ahead 31 Richards Ross later avenged her individual loss by making up a ten meter deficit in the women s 4 400 meters relay and catching the Russian sprinter on the anchor leg right before the finish line allowing Team USA to win by a 0 28 second margin Throughout her entire sporting career Richards Ross answered questions regarding the 2008 Olympic 400 meters race with self described half truths attributing her loss to a sudden right hamstring injury lack of sleep or fate 32 In her 2017 memoir Chasing Grace What the Quarter Mile Taught Me about God and Life she finally revealed the underlying reason for her disappointing loss at the 2008 Olympics one month before the Games Richards Ross discovered that she was pregnant and decided to terminate the pregnancy the day before leaving for Beijing 33 A devout Christian woman and a world class athlete at the prime of her career she endured much physical and emotional turmoil following her difficult decision even into the 2008 Olympics as explicated in the book I made a decision that broke me and one from which I would not immediately heal from Abortion would now forever be a part of my life A scarlet letter I never thought I d wear 34 2009 2011 editWith the echoes of her Beijing loss still lingering into 2009 Richards Ross began working with a sports psychologist at the urging of coach Clyde Hart to overcome her bouts of anxiety and emotional anguish 35 36 Her efforts on the track coupled with her mental preparation made a difference as the 2009 season became her most successful to date Richards Ross won the 400 meters U S national title in 50 05 seconds 0 74 seconds over second place finisher Debbie Dunn and qualified for the 2009 Berlin World Championships In Berlin she won her first global 400 meters title by dominating the 400 meters final from start to finish winning in 49 00 seconds and proving to her critics that she could perform on the sport s biggest stages The newly crowned world champion then anchored Team USA to a gold medal in the women s 4 400 meters relay The winning time of 3 17 83 minutes was the sixth fastest time in history up until then with Richards Ross unofficially splitting 48 43 seconds on her anchor leg 37 nbsp Richards Ross celebrating her victory at the 2009 Berlin World ChampionshipsUpon leaving Berlin Richards Ross returned to the track to continue her 2009 IAAF Golden League win streak In addition to winning the Berlin meet in 49 57 seconds Oslo in 49 23 seconds Rome in 49 46 seconds and Paris in 49 34 seconds all before the world championships she claimed victory again in the last two Golden League meets in Zurich and Brussels with times of 48 94 seconds and 48 83 seconds respectively 38 This was her third time sweeping the IAAF Golden League meets a feat she accomplished in 2006 and 2007 as well allowing her to once again earn a share of the 1 million jackpot 39 After a 49 95 second win in the 400 meters IAAF World Athletics Final meet she broke Marita Koch s record for the most career sub 50 second performances surpassing Koch s total of 35 with her own total of 41 40 41 42 Her only defeat this season in any event was to the now three time defending 200 meter world champion Allyson Felix at the IAAF World Athletics Final in the 200 meters with the victor discerned via photo finish and Richards Ross declared second in an identical time of 22 29 seconds 43 44 To cap off the successful season the 24 year old American woman along with Usain Bolt were named the 2009 IAAF World Athlete of Year 45 The next two outdoor seasons however proved to be difficult and disappointing for the defending world champion A quad injury right before the 2010 Penn Relays forced Richards Ross to prematurely end her 2010 season to rest and regroup 46 She bounced back in 2011 to run a 49 66 second 400 meters race at the London Diamond League meet just prior to the 2011 Daegu World Championships sparking some optimism of rounding back into top form in time for the major competition 47 In Daegu Richards Ross struggled to find her rhythm as she narrowly qualified for the 400 meters final and then wounded up seventh in a time of 51 32 seconds She later returned in the 4 400 meters relay this time running the lead off leg in 49 1 seconds and setting the U S women up for victory 2012 edit Road to London edit nbsp Richards Ross racing at the 2012 Istanbul World Indoor ChampionshipsHealthy and well rested Richards Ross began her 2012 quest for the coveted individual Olympic gold medal by racing a full indoor schedule to warm up for her outdoor debut 48 With four wins in four indoor races under her belt coming into the 2012 IAAF World Indoor Championships she secured a resounding 400 meter victory in Istanbul with a time of 50 79 seconds 0 97 seconds ahead of the Russian runner up 49 Her first indoor world title ushered in some much needed confidence as the outdoor season began Richards Ross decisively won the 400 meter final at the 2012 U S Olympic trials tying the Olympic trials record of 49 28 seconds and earning a berth to her third consecutive Olympics 50 Longtime teammate DeeDee Trotter and the 2011 world bronze medalist Francena McCorory finished second and third respectively and joined her on the 400 meters team Later at the trials Richards Ross also finished third in the 200 meter sprint in 22 22 seconds allowing her to attempt the rare 200 meter 400 meter double at the 2012 London Olympics 51 Once again heading into the Olympic Games as the 400 meter favorite she shouldered the same pressure and expectations but this time Richards Ross was prepared to maintain her serenity amidst the vortex 52 Stiff competition lined up for the 400 meters final in London including the defending 2008 Olympic champion Christine Ohuruogu of Great Britain 2011 world champion Amantle Montsho of Botswana and Antonina Krivoshapka of Russia who held the world leading time of 49 16 seconds 53 From the sound of the gun Richards Ross executed a race opposite of the one four years ago pushing hard out of the blocks before relaxing into a comfortable stride down the backstretch and entering the homestretch in the third position behind Krivoshapka and DeeDee Trotter 54 The U S champion willed her legs to pull ahead of the field with fifty meters left of the race and in the final moments which almost mirrored the 2008 race in Beijing as Ohuruogu closed down quickly on the leading American Richards Ross held on to win in 49 55 seconds finally earning the gold medal that had long eluded her 55 This victory became the first time an American woman had won the event in 28 years since Valerie Brisco Hooks in 1984 56 Despite a fifth place finish later in the 200 meters final the newly crowned Olympic champion concluded the Games by running 49 1 seconds on the anchor leg of the victorious U S women s 4 400 meters relay team and left London with two gold medals 57 58 Opposition to Rule 40 edit nbsp Richards Ross celebrating at the 2012 Olympic GamesThroughout the Olympic season Richards Ross had appeared at the forefront of an athlete driven WeDemandChange movement advocating against the International Olympic Committee s IOC controversial Rule 40 a regulation that forbids Olympic athletes and coaches from acknowledging personal non Olympic sponsors by name wearing additional logos on apparel or promoting them on social media two weeks before or during the Olympic Games 59 The rule strived to prevent ambush marketing and concentrate viewer attention on messages from official Olympic sponsors such as Coca Cola and Visa which had paid a hefty amount for exclusive partnerships with the Games although none of the multi billion dollar revenue trickled into athletes pockets 60 Prior to the London Olympics she sparked a discussion on the topic tweeting With 6 billion exchanging hands during the Olympics why do the athletes compete for free QuestionsThatNeedAnswers WeDemandChange 61 Since track and field professionals earn the vast majority of their income through sponsorship deals Rule 40 prevents them from thanking personal sponsors for their endorsement and also dissuades potential non Olympic sponsors from investing in these athletes when the sport is receiving the most attention 62 Starting on July 29 2012 a group of U S track and field athletes including Trey Hardee Bernard Lagat Nick Symmonds and Dawn Harper Nelson coordinated a Twitter campaign to criticize the restriction on athletes rights posting messages with hashtags WeDemandChange Rule40 and WeDemandChange2012 63 Richards Ross spoke at a news conference regarding the WeDemandChange campaign on the following day and explained that although she was fortunate to have secured major sponsorships to continue her training and treatment many athletes have to work two or three jobs to be able to afford to stay in the sport 64 Answering conference reporters she said I ve been very fortunate to do very well around the Olympics but so many of my peers struggle in the sport and I think it s unjust that they re not being considered that athletes are not part of the conversation At the Olympic Village in London Richards Ross helped organize a group of track and field athletes to share their concerns further their message to the IOC and discuss potential regulation amendments to accommodate the athletes with several options including permission to post sponsors on social media clearance to wear non Olympic sponsor logos and IOC funded prize money 65 Efforts by these track and field athletes along with later campaigns voicing Olympic athletes discontent finally pushed to the IOC to slightly amend Rule 40 for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics allowing athletes to promote personal sponsors and appear in their advertisements during the Games within specific guidelines 66 2015 Retirement edit Following two surgeries to correct a persistent toe problem Richards Ross injured her calf muscle right before the 2015 U S national championships which lead her to finish fifth in her semi final and prevent her from qualifying for the 2015 Beijing World Championships 67 68 Despite not making the individual team the track veteran was still selected to be on the women s 4 400 meters relay in Beijing There she ran a 51 5 second leg to help the United States team win silver 69 Richards Ross admitted later that overtraining as she was approaching the closing stages of her career might have contributed to the rapid decline in the latter part of the season 70 2016 began with the official announcement of her retirement by the end of the track season 71 Still in recovery from a third toe surgery the reigning 400 meter Olympic champion suffered an injury to her right hamstring at the 2016 U S Olympic trials prompting her to discontinue the race and salute the Hayward Field crowd one last time 72 73 Shortly after retiring Richards Ross joined the NBC broadcasting team as a track and field analyst for major events such as the 2016 and 2020 Summer Olympics 74 Personal life editWhile attending the University of Texas Richards Ross began dating Longhorn football cornerback Aaron Ross who later played for the New York Giants in the NFL 75 76 The two were engaged in 2007 and married in 2010 77 Their wedding was featured on an episode of Platinum Weddings 78 The pair welcomed their first child Aaron Jermaine Ross II in 2017 and announced in July 2023 that they were expecting their second child later revealed to be a boy in September 2023 79 For five years Richards Ross suffered from severe onsets of mouth ulcers joint aches and full body skin lesions which in 2007 doctors initially thought were caused by a rare chronic disease involving the inflammation of blood vessels called Behcet s disease 80 81 She began donning compression arm sleeves in competition to hide her ulcerated skin but as a fashion enthusiast later embraced the extra garment as part of her trademark look 82 Exploring new opportunities off the track in 2013 Richards Ross premiered her WE tv reality TV show Glam and Gold a docu series that followed her as she juggled appearances ran businesses trained for the track season and balanced life with her husband and family 83 Primarily shot at their home in Austin the series also visited Florida New York and Jamaica where she took Team SRR for an Olympic victory lap and celebration 84 Achievements editCompetition record edit Year Competition Venue Position Event NotesRepresenting the nbsp United States2002 World Junior Championships Kingston Jamaica 3rd 200m 23 09 wind 0 2 m s 2nd 400m 51 493rd h 85 4 400 m relay 3 35 842003 World Championships Paris France 11th sf 400 m 51 321st 4 400 m relay 3 22 632004 Olympic Games Athens Greece 6th 400 m 50 191st 4 400 m relay 3 19 012005 World Championships Helsinki Finland 2nd 400 m 49 74World Athletics Final Monaco 1st 400 m 49 522006 World Indoor Championships Moscow Russia 9th sf 400 m 52 46World Athletics Final Stuttgart Germany 2nd 200 m 22 171st 400 m 49 25World Cup Athens Greece 1st 400 m 48 701st 200 m 22 232007 World Championships Osaka Japan 5th 200 m 22 701st 4 400 m relay 3 18 552008 Olympic Games Beijing China 3rd 400 m 49 931st 4 400 m relay 3 18 542009 World Championships Berlin Germany 1st 400m 49 001st 4 400 m relay 3 17 832011 World Championships Daegu South Korea 7th 400 m 51 321st 4 400 m relay 3 18 092012 World Indoor Championships Istanbul Turkey 1st 400 m 50 792nd 4 400 m relay 3 28 79Olympic Games London United Kingdom 5th 200 m 22 391st 400 m 49 551st 4 400 m relay 3 16 882014 World Relay Championships Nassau Bahamas 1st 4 400 m relay 3 21 732015 World Relay Championships Nassau Bahamas 1st Distance medley relay 10 36 50 WR 1st 4 400 m relay 3 19 39World Championships Beijing China 2nd 4 400 m relay 3 19 44National titles edit Six time national 400 meters champion 2003 51 01 2005 49 28 2006 49 27 2008 49 89 2009 50 05 2012 49 28 Personal bests edit Event Time seconds Venue Date60 meters 7 21 Lincoln Nebraska United States February 28 2004100 meters 10 97 Shanghai China September 28 2007200 meters 22 09 New York City USA June 8 2012400 meters 48 70 National Record Athens Greece September 16 2006All information from World Athletics profile 86 Diamond League wins edit 2011 London 400m 2012 Eugene 400m New York 200m Stockholm 400m Zurich 400m References edit Sanya Richards Ross worldathletics org World athletics federation Long ride worth the wait as Richards Ross claims elusive gold World Athletics Retrieved 10 September 2021 Felix takes on Richards Ross over 400m in Eugene IAAF Diamond League World Athletics Retrieved 10 September 2021 Women s World Rankings by Event Track amp Field News Retrieved 10 September 2021 Women s World 400 Rankings by Athlete Track amp Field News Retrieved 10 September 2021 Fab five multiple winners of the World Athlete of the Year award World Athletics Retrieved 6 September 2021 Felix takes on Richards Ross over 400m in Eugene IAAF Diamond League World Athletics Retrieved 10 September 2021 Acosta Amelia 21 April 2021 You cannot separate your human experience from your sporting success A conversation with Sanya Richards Ross NBC Sports Retrieved 6 September 2021 Watts Jenisha 5 June 2017 Olympic champion Sanya Richards Ross on her new memoir Chasing Grace ESPN Retrieved 6 September 2021 The Real Housewives of Atlanta Season 14 Cast Announced Bravo TV Official Site 25 October 2021 Retrieved 26 October 2021 Richards Ross Sanya 2017 Chasing Grace What the Quarter Mile has Taught Me about God and Life HarperCollins Publishers p 41 Life 101 Personally Speaking Sanya Richards Ross Nova Southeastern Florida University Retrieved 10 August 2021 Biography Sanya Richards Ross Olympics Retrieved 7 August 2021 Hall of Fame Florida High School Athletics Association Retrieved 6 September 2021 Underwood Steve Learning experience propels Richards to greatness RunnerSpace Retrieved 8 September 2021 Olympian and UT Ex Sanya Richards Ross will be Spring Commencement Speaker The University of Texas at Austin News 20 February 2013 Retrieved 10 August 2021 Twice As Nice For Texas Richards In 2003 U S Track amp Field and Cross Country Association Retrieved 7 August 2021 Relay win is redemption for USA women USA Today August 28 2004 Archived from the original on August 29 2004 Richards Ross Sanya 2017 Chasing Grace What the Quarter Mile has Taught Me about God and Life HarperCollins Publishers p 66 Richards Ross Sanya 2017 Chasing Grace What the Quarter Mile has Taught Me about God and Life HarperCollins Publishers p 76 Richards becomes youngest ever under 49 seconds TDK Golden League Zurich World Athletics Retrieved 10 August 2021 Richards Ross Sanya 2017 Chasing Grace What the Quarter Mile has Taught Me about God and Life HarperCollins Publishers pp 88 92 2006 End of Year Reviews SPRINTS World Athletics Retrieved 10 August 2021 Jesse Owens Awards go to Richards and Wariner World Athletics Retrieved 10 August 2021 IAAF Golden League Jackpot Three remain in hunt for 1 Million World Athletics Retrieved 10 August 2021 Richards Ross Sanya 2017 Chasing Grace What the Quarter Mile has Taught Me about God and Life HarperCollins Publishers p 111 Osaka 2007 Women s 200m Felix blasts back to London s past for a glimpse of the future World Athletics Retrieved 10 August 2021 2007 End of Year Reviews SPRINTS World Athletics Retrieved 10 August 2021 Richards Ross Sanya 2017 Chasing Grace What the Quarter Mile has Taught Me about God and Life HarperCollins Publishers p 112 2007 End of Year Reviews SPRINTS World Athletics Retrieved 10 August 2021 Linden Julian 19 August 2008 Ohuruogu wins women s 400m gold Reuters Retrieved 15 August 2021 Richards Ross Sanya 2017 Chasing Grace What the Quarter Mile has Taught Me about God and Life HarperCollins Publishers p 129 Levy Sara Gaynes 8 June 2017 Track Star Sanya Richards Ross Opens Up About Her Abortion I Made a Decision That Broke Me Glamour Retrieved 15 August 2021 Richards Ross Sanya 2017 Chasing Grace What the Quarter Mile has Taught Me about God and Life HarperCollins Publishers p 135 Richards Ross Sanya 2017 Chasing Grace What the Quarter Mile has Taught Me about God and Life HarperCollins Publishers p 152 Acosta Amelia 21 April 2021 You cannot separate your human experience from your sporting success A conversation with Sanya Richards Ross NBC Sports Retrieved 22 August 2021 Larsson Peter All time Women s best 4 400 m relay Track and Field All time Performances Retrieved 22 August 2021 Bekele Isinbayeva and Richards road to the Jackpot AF Golden League World Athletics Retrieved 22 August 2021 Bekele Isinbayeva and Richards road to the Jackpot AF Golden League World Athletics Retrieved 22 August 2021 Gay powers back with 9 77 in Rome REPORT AF Golden League World Athletics Retrieved 22 August 2021 2009 Athletes of the Year Finalists Spotlight on Female Candidates World Athletics Retrieved 22 August 2021 Profile Sanya Richards Ross World Athletics Retrieved 22 August 2021 Americans Impress At World Athletics Final PodiumRunner 14 September 2009 Retrieved 22 August 2021 Felix ties with Richards in Finals from Universal Sports YouTube SportsNetwork Usain Bolt and Sanya Richards named world athletes of the year The Guardian 22 November 2009 Retrieved 22 August 2021 Sanya Richards Ross I am doing everything I can to get back as soon as possible World Athletics Retrieved 22 August 2021 Sanya Richards Ross 49 66 season s best and victory at London Diamond League 2011 FloTrack Retrieved 22 August 2021 Richards Ross Sanya 2017 Chasing Grace What the Quarter Mile has Taught Me about God and Life HarperCollins Publishers p 175 Richards Ross Sanya 3 March 2012 Richards Ross is 4 for 4 indoors ESPN Retrieved 6 September 2021 Binder Doug 25 June 2012 U S Olympic trials Sanya Richards Ross breaks Hayward Field record in women s 400 Oregon Live The Oregonian Retrieved 6 September 2021 US Olympic trials Allyson Felix wins 200m as 100m tie break looms The Guardian July 2012 Retrieved 6 September 2021 Richards Ross Sanya 2017 Chasing Grace What the Quarter Mile has Taught Me about God and Life HarperCollins Publishers p 191 Maidment Neil August 2012 Athletics Richards Ross in best ever shape says coach Reuters Retrieved 6 September 2021 USA s Sanya Richards Ross Wins Women s 400m Gold London 2012 Olympics YouTube Olympics Retrieved 6 September 2021 Hanstock Bill 2012 Olympics Women s 400m Results Sanya Richards Ross Takes The Gold SB Nation Retrieved 6 September 2021 Pilon Mary 5 August 2012 Richards Ross Breaks American Drought In the Women s 400 The New York Times Retrieved 6 September 2021 Chappell Bill Goldman Tom 8 August 2012 Allyson Felix Wins Gold In Women s 200 Meters NPR Retrieved 6 September 2021 Track and Field Womenʼs 4 400 m Relay The New York Times Retrieved 6 September 2021 Belson Ken 30 July 2012 Olympians Take to Twitter to Protest Endorsement Rule The New York Times Retrieved 6 September 2021 Heitner Darren What Do Professional Athletes Have To Gain From Participating In The London Olympics Forbes Retrieved 6 September 2021 McClusky Mark Olympians Take to Twitter to Protest Social Media Restrictions Wired Retrieved 6 September 2021 Heitner Darren What Do Professional Athletes Have To Gain From Participating In The London Olympics Forbes Retrieved 6 September 2021 McClusky Mark Olympians Take to Twitter to Protest Social Media Restrictions Wired Retrieved 6 September 2021 Belson Ken 30 July 2012 Olympians Take to Twitter to Protest Endorsement Rule The New York Times Retrieved 6 September 2021 Pilon Mary 25 August 2012 Games Are Over Battle Goes On The New York Times Retrieved 6 September 2021 Du Lisa 5 August 2021 Olympians Try to Cash In Hawking Cereal Detergent to Millions of New Instagram Followers Bloomberg com Retrieved 6 September 2021 2015 USATF Championship Results USA Track amp Field Retrieved 6 September 2021 Scott Roxanna Sanya Richards Ross aiming for gold in Rio despite tough season USA Today Retrieved 6 September 2021 Women s 4 400 m Final Splits Allyson Felix Officially 47 72 Watch Athletics Retrieved 6 September 2021 Weir Stuart 28 December 2015 Sanya Richards Ross talks 2016 Athletics Weekly Retrieved 11 September 2021 Richards Ross Sanya 2017 Chasing Grace What the Quarter Mile has Taught Me about God and Life HarperCollins Publishers p 186 Zaccardi Nick 25 April 2016 Sanya Richards Ross to retire after Rio Olympics NBC Sports Retrieved 6 September 2021 Bohnert Craig Sanya Richards Ross Unable to Finish Heat Team USA Archived from the original on July 5 2016 Retrieved 6 September 2021 Acosta Amelia 21 April 2021 You cannot separate your human experience from your sporting success A conversation with Sanya Richards Ross NBC Sports Retrieved 6 September 2021 Perfect match Track star girlfriend pushes Ross ESPN com 2 April 2007 Retrieved 4 November 2018 Townsend Brad 2008 08 19 Sanya Richards More than snake bitten Dallas Morning News Retrieved 2008 08 19 lt None gt a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint postscript link Mallozzi Vincent 4 March 2010 Sanya Richards and Aaron Ross The New York Times Retrieved 6 September 2021 Platinum Weddings Sanya amp Aaron WE tv Wetv com 2011 02 25 Archived from the original on 2011 04 27 Retrieved 2011 09 03 Juris Yvonne Aaron and Sanya Richards Ross Welcome Son Aaron Jermaine II People Retrieved 6 September 2021 Kessel Anna 22 May 2010 To go from being healthy to having this very rare disease was scary The Guardian Retrieved 11 September 2021 Slater Matt London 2012 Diagnosis boost for Sanya Richards Ross BBC Sport Retrieved 11 September 2021 Elliott Helene 27 June 2012 Sanya Richards Ross has visions of gold Los Angeles Times Retrieved 11 September 2021 Sanya s Glam amp Gold About WE tv Archived from the original on 2013 08 20 Retrieved 2013 06 19 Sanya s Glam and Gold Official Press Release Retrieved 4 November 2018 Competed only in the heat Profile Sanya Richards Ross World Athletics Retrieved 9 September 2021 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Sanya Richards Ross Official Website World Athletics Profile Sanya Richards Ross USA Track amp Field Profile Sanya Richards RossAwardsPreceded byAlan Webb USA Track amp Field Youth Athlete of the Year2002 Succeeded byJason RichardsonPreceded by nbsp Yelena Isinbayeva Women s Track amp Field Athlete of the Year2006 Succeeded by nbsp Meseret DefarPreceded by nbsp Tirunesh Dibaba Women s Track amp Field Athlete of the Year2009 Succeeded by nbsp Blanka Vlasic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sanya Richards Ross amp oldid 1185351676, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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