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Melissa Jefferson-Wooden Is Running Into America’s Sprinting Spotlight

Deji Ogeyingbo by Deji Ogeyingbo
June 3, 2025
in Interviews, Track & Field
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Melissa Jefferson-Wooden Is Running Into America’s Sprinting Spotlight

Melissa Jefferson, Scenes from Day 1 at the Grand Slam Track on Saturday, May 31, 2025 at Philadelphia, PA. Photo by Taylor Sims.

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Melissa Jefferson-Wooden Is Running Into America’s Sprinting Spotlight

By all accounts, Melissa Jefferson-Wooden has been on fire this season. The 23-year-old sprinter has found a way to string together back-to-back brilliance, and now it’s hard to ignore what’s happening. After a pair of personal bests this past weekend in Philadelphia, 10.73 seconds in the 100 meters and 21.99 in the 200, Jefferson-Wooden has carved out her place among the very best sprinters in America. Not in the future. Right now.

Her wins at the Philly Grand Slam Track meet were felt more than just fast times. They were a reminder that there’s more than one face of American sprinting. The timing couldn’t be better. As Sha’Carri Richardson and Gabby Thomas continue to dominate headlines, especially with their performance from the Olympics,  Jefferson-Wooden has quietly stepped into the same conversation by letting her times speak louder than anything she could say.

Saturday’s 200 meters was the first sign that something special was happening. She ran 21.99, a mark that not only beat Thomas, the Olympic champion in the event, but also set a meet record at historic Franklin Field. It was a clean race with a fine running rhythm. The curve was smooth, the transition into the straight controlled, and her top-end speed looked better than ever. It was the kind of run that felt rehearsed but still thrilling.

Melissa Jefferson Wooden, Scenes from Day 1 at the Grand Slam Track 2025: Philadelphia on Saturday, May 31, 2025 at Franklin Field at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, PA. Photo by Matt Pendleton for Grand Slam Track.

She backed it up on Sunday with a dazzling performance in her signature event. Her 10.73 win in the 100 meters was a personal best. It was the fastest time in the world this year. Tamari Davis finished a distant second in 11.03. Gabby Thomas, fresh off the 200, was fourth. The win was emphatic.

These weren’t lucky races or wind-aided marks. They were clean, measured, and earned. Her 10.73 makes her the fifth-fastest American woman of all time in the 100 meters. Only Florence Griffith-Joyner, Carmelita Jeter, Marion Jones, and Richardson have ever run faster. That’s an elite company, and she knows it.

Melissa Jefferson, Scenes from Day 1 at the Grand Slam Track on Saturday, May 31, 2025 at Philadelphia, PA. Photo by Taylor Sims.

But what’s been just as impressive is how she’s put her season together. Her early races in Kingston, Jamaica weren’t headline-grabbing. A windy 11.11 in the 100m and a 23.46 in the 200 under heavy resistance were solid but not eye-catching. Her Miami double, 22.15 and 10.75 (+2.4m/s), showed flashes. But now, in June, she looks sharper, more explosive, and more confident.

Jefferson-Wooden has said that she’s been training hard for both events. While she still sees herself as a 100-meter runner, her work in the 200 has clearly paid off. She looks more composed off the curve, better at holding form under pressure, and more relaxed in the final meters. That’s not easy to learn, and it usually doesn’t click overnight.

Melissa Jefferson Wooden, Scenes from Day 2 at the Grand Slam Track 2025: Philadelphia on Sunday, June 1, 2025 at Franklin Field at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia, PA. Photo by Howard Lao for Grand Slam Track.

What’s fascinating is how she speaks about her races. Her post-200-meter comments in Philly were raw and revealing. She explained that when she hit the curve and saw the Grand Slam sign, she knew she had to commit. “Do not break form,” she repeated to herself. “Lean at the line.” It’s simple, but it captures something real. She’s not just running. She’s learning how to race. And she’s learning fast.

There’s also the matter of money. With her wins in Philly, she leaves with a cool $100,000 and two new PBs. The Grand Slam Track series, with its incentives and format, seems to be getting the best out of her. Athletes peak when they feel supported. She’s showing what happens when a sprinter gets the right mix of pressure and opportunity.

Melissa Jefferson Wooden, Scenes from Day 2 at the Grand Slam Track on Saturday, May 31, 2025 at Philadelphia, PA. Photo by Taylor Sims

It’s tempting to ask if she can keep this up through the summer. The Olympic Trials are around the corner. Paris isn’t far away. The US team is as stacked as ever, with Sha’Carri, Gabby, and Tamari all in the mix. But Jefferson-Wooden isn’t just knocking on the door, she’s already inside.

After her Bronze in the 100m at the Paris Olympics last year, she has improved in both events heading into this year’s world championships in Tokyo. She’s showing poise in big races. And most importantly, she’s closing hard when it matters.

Author

  • Deji Ogeyingbo

    Deji Ogeyingbo is one of Nigeria’s leading Track and Field Journalists as he has worked in various capacities as a writer, content creator, and reporter for radio and TV stations in the country and Africa. Deji has covered varying degrees of Sporting competitions within and outside Nigeria which includes, African Championships and World Junior Championships. Also, he founded one of Nigeria’s leading Sports PR and Branding company in Nikau Sports in 2020, a company that aims to change the narrative of how athletes are perceived in Nigeria while looking to grow their image to the highest possible level.

    View all posts
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