Bhubaneswar: American sprinter Melissa Jefferson-Wooden didn’t hold back in her reaction to missing out on this year’s Athlete of the Year award. “It was a slap in the face,” she said, describing what she felt was a glaring oversight by the sport’s highest recognitions.
Her frustration was not without reason. In 2025, Jefferson-Wooden achieved a feat that few women even dream of: gold medals in the 100 m, 200 m and the 4 × 100 m relay at the World Championships in Tokyo. That made her only the second woman in history after Shelly‑Ann Fraser‑Pryce to accomplish the sprint treble at a single global championships.
Yet, when the finalists were announced, her name was absent. Confronted with the question of what more she could possibly do to earn recognition, she replied bluntly: “What else was I supposed to do?”
Jefferson-Wooden, always candid, also touched on a recurring sentiment in her career:
“I’ve been getting overlooked … I guess I’ll try harder next time.”
In many ways, this moment underlines a larger narrative in elite athletics — where dominance on the track does not always guarantee expected accolades off it. For her part, Jefferson-Wooden is undeterred. Her message is clear: the work continues. And after a season like hers, the question isn’t if she’ll return — but how hard she’ll hit next time.



















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