Gurindervir Singh ran 10.09 seconds at the 2026 Federation Cup in Ranchi to become the first Indian sprinter to break the 10.10-second barrier in the men’s 100m. Here is the full story.
There are sporting moments you remember not just because of what happened, but because of how it built. The tension before it. The near-misses. The back-and-forth makes the final result feel earned rather than inevitable.
What happened in Ranchi over two days at the 2026 Athletics Federation Cup was exactly that kind of moment — and Indian athletics may never be quite the same after it.
On Saturday, May 23, Punjab sprinter Gurindervir Singh crossed the finish line of the men’s 100m final in 10.09 seconds — a new national record, and the first time in history that an Indian athlete has officially clocked a time below 10.10 seconds. He won gold, secured Commonwealth Games qualification, and did it in front of an audience that had already been watching him and Animesh Kujur trade national records for twenty-four consecutive hours.

How It Unfolded Over Two Days
The story did not start with Saturday’s final. It started the day before, in the semifinal heats.
On Friday, May 22, Gurindervir ran 10.17 seconds in the opening semifinal — breaking the previous national record of 10.18 seconds held by Animesh Kujur. For a few minutes, Gurindervir was officially India’s fastest man over 100 metres.
That did not last long.
In the very next semifinal heat, Kujur came back with a 10.15-second run — reclaiming the record and, crucially, breaking the Commonwealth Games qualification standard of 10.16 seconds in the process. Gurindervir had missed that mark by just 0.01 seconds. One hundredth of a second separating qualification from the wait.
It set up a final with genuine stakes on both sides.
On Saturday, Gurindervir did not leave any room for doubt. His 10.09-second sprint was not just a new national record — it was a statement. He became the first Indian sprinter in history to officially run below the 10.10-second barrier, securing both Commonwealth Games and Asian Games qualification in a single race. Kujur finished second at 10.20 seconds, and Pranav Pramod took bronze with 10.29 seconds.
Why 10.09 Matters Beyond the Number
For years, the 10.10-second mark existed as an invisible wall for Indian sprinting. Talented athletes came close. But nobody crossed it. The barrier carried the same psychological weight that the four-minute mile once did — not impossible in theory, but somehow untouched in practice.
Gurindervir’s 10.09 did not just chip away at that wall. It knocked it down completely.
His time is also the second fastest by an Asian athlete this season, sitting just behind the 10.08 seconds clocked by 19-year-old Japanese sprinter Fukuto Komuro in May. That puts Gurindervir in genuinely elite company at the continental level.
He is a petty officer in the Indian Navy, coached by James Hillier. Kujur, his rival in these two remarkable days, is mentored by Martin Owens. The fact that India now has two sprinters operating at this level — and pushing each other to faster and faster times — is perhaps the most exciting thing about the whole story.
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The Rivalry That Is Just Getting Started
Gurindervir and Kujur have effectively handed Indian athletics its most compelling sprint rivalry in years. In two semifinal heats and one final, they exchanged national records three times in under 48 hours. That kind of competitive pressure between two domestic rivals is exactly what produces faster and faster performances — and with the Commonwealth Games and Asian Games both on the horizon, the stage is set for more.
Both athletes have now qualified. Both are running faster than any Indian sprinter ever has. And both clearly bring out something extra in each other.
In Ranchi on Saturday evening, Indian sprinting moved into territory it has never occupied before. Gurindervir Singh got there first. The question now is how much further both of them can go.


