Gurindervir Singh Runs 10.09 Seconds to Become the Fastest Indian Sprinter in History
In a breathtaking display of speed at the Birsa Munda Athletics Stadium in Ranchi, Gurindervir Singh has etched his name into Indian sporting history by clocking 10.09 seconds in the 100-metre final at the Federation Cup 2026 — becoming the first Indian sprinter ever to break into the 10.0-second range. The 25-year-old Punjabi athlete shattered the previous national record of 10.17 seconds, which he himself had set just a day earlier in the semifinals.
Two Days, Two National Records
The Federation Cup 100-metre event produced an extraordinary 48 hours of Indian athletics:
- Friday semifinal: Gurindervir clocked 10.17s, breaking Animesh Kujur’s national record of 10.18s that had stood since mid-2025
- Saturday final: With near-perfect conditions (24°C, 1.2 m/s tailwind, well within the legal 2.0 m/s limit), Gurindervir exploded off the blocks and maintained his speed through to the finish line in 10.09s
Animesh Kujur, the man whose record Gurindervir had broken just hours earlier, finished second in 10.20s — a time that would have been a national record as recently as March 2025. The gap of 0.11 seconds between first and second was enormous by sprinting standards, underlining the level of Gurindervir’s performance.
The Significance of 10.09
To appreciate what 10.09 seconds means, one must understand the hierarchy of global sprinting:
- Sub-10: The exclusive club of all-time greats — Usain Bolt (9.58), Tyson Gay (9.69), Yohan Blake (9.69)
- 10.00–10.10: World-class — typically competitive in Olympic and World Championship semifinals
- 10.10–10.20: Continental elite — competitive in Asian Championships and Commonwealth Games finals
- 10.20–10.30: National level in most countries — India’s previous ceiling
Gurindervir’s 10.09 places him firmly in the world-class bracket. For context, the winning time at the 2024 Paris Olympics 100m final was 9.79s (Noah Lyles). The 2025 World Championships in Tokyo saw a winning time of 9.84s. While Gurindervir is still a distance from podium contention at the very top level, his 10.09 would have been sufficient to make the Olympic semifinal in Paris.
India’s Sprinting Revolution
Indian sprinting has traditionally been overshadowed by the country’s success in middle-distance events and field disciplines. The 100-metre national record had languished above 10.20 for years before Animesh Kujur’s breakthrough in 2025. Now, with two men having run sub-10.20 in the same race, India is witnessing a genuine sprint revolution.
Several factors have contributed to this transformation:
- Sports Science Investment: The Sports Authority of India (SAI) has partnered with foreign biomechanics experts and sports science institutions, providing athletes with world-class support in nutrition, recovery, and training methodology.
- Competition Exposure: Regular participation in international Diamond League events and Grand Prix competitions has exposed Indian sprinters to faster fields, improving their race craft and competitive temperament.
- Infrastructure: State-of-the-art tracks like the one at Birsa Munda Stadium in Ranchi — which hosted the Federation Cup — provide the kind of fast, well-maintained surfaces that facilitate record-breaking performances.
- Peer Competition: The rivalry between Gurindervir and Animesh Kujur has been a catalyst, with each pushing the other to new heights. This kind of healthy domestic competition was absent in Indian sprinting for decades.
The Road to the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics
Gurindervir’s performance is particularly significant with the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics now just over two years away. The Olympic qualifying standard for the 100 metres is expected to be set around 10.00 seconds, which means Gurindervir needs to shave off another 0.09 seconds — a gap that, while substantial, is achievable given his current trajectory.
“I always believed an Indian could run in the 10.0s. Today I proved it. But my journey doesn’t end here — I want to represent India in the Olympic 100m final,” Gurindervir said at the post-race press conference, his voice cracking with emotion.
Background and Training
Gurindervir Singh hails from Nanhera village in Amritsar district, Punjab — a region better known for producing hockey and kabaddi players than sprinters. His father, a retired army subedar, introduced him to athletics at age 12. Under the guidance of coach Jagminder Singh and later the national coaching staff at NIS Patiala, Gurindervir has steadily improved — from 10.42s in 2021 to 10.28s in 2023, 10.18s in 2024, and now the historic 10.09s.
The Athletics Federation of India (AFI) has congratulated Gurindervir and announced that he will be given a ₹25 lakh cash reward and priority inclusion in international competition calendars for the 2026 season.
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