Nigerian sprint sensation Kanyinsola Ajayi has etched his name into the country’s athletics history books after shattering the national men’s 100m record with a stunning 9.84-second performance at the 2026 NCAA Division I East First Round meet in Lexington, Kentucky.
Representing Auburn University, the 21-year-old delivered the record-breaking run during the quarter-final heats, eclipsing the long-standing Nigerian record of 9.85 seconds set by Olusoji Fasuba in May 2006. The mark had stood untouched for two decades before Ajayi’s remarkable breakthrough.
This achievement establishes Ajayi’s status as one of the fastest rising stars in global sprinting. Earlier in the competition, he had clocked 9.90 seconds, but returned with an even more impressive performance to rewrite Nigerian athletics history.
Ajayi’s 9.84 seconds currently stands as the fastest men’s 100m time recorded anywhere in the world in 2026. The time also places him among the greatest collegiate sprinters in NCAA history, ranking as the second-fastest collegiate performer ever and just 0.02 seconds shy of Christian Coleman’s NCAA record of 9.82 seconds set in 2017.
The Nigerian sprinter has been on an upward trajectory in recent years. In 2025, he became the first Nigerian man in 18 years to qualify for the men’s 100m final at the World Athletics Championships. He ran 9.88 seconds in the heats before finishing sixth in the final, signaling his arrival among the world’s elite sprinters.
Meanwhile, another Nigerian athlete, Samuel Ogazi, also delivered a historic performance at the same competition. The Alabama star clocked 43.82 seconds in the men’s 400m, setting a new Nigerian national record and reclaiming the world-leading mark for the event in 2026.
Ogazi’s performance not only broke the national record but also established a new school record for Alabama and became one of the fastest collegiate 400m times ever recorded.
The record-breaking performances by Ajayi and Ogazi mark a significant moment for Nigerian athletics, highlighting the country’s growing influence on the global sprinting stage. With both athletes in world leading form, expectations will be high as they prepare for the NCAA Championships and major international competitions later this year.