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Gurindervir Singh Shatters India's 100m Record, Clocks 10.09s
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Economic Times5/25/2026Sports3 min readIndia

Gurindervir Singh Shatters India's 100m Record, Clocks 10.09s

Quick Look

  • Gurindervir Singh has broken India's 100m national record twice, achieving 10.09 seconds and qualifying for the Commonwealth Games.
  • The 25-year-old sprinter, son of a farmer, credits his family, coaches, and the Reliance Foundation for his success.

AI-generated summary

Why It Matters

Gurindervir Singh, a 25-year-old farmer's son from Punjab, has achieved a historic milestone by breaking India's 100m national record with a time of 10.09 seconds. This achievement qualifies him for the Commonwealth Games and challenges previous notions about Indian sprinters' capabilities.

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Gurindervir Singh has shattered India's 100m national record, clocking an astonishing 10.09 seconds. This remarkable feat, achieved twice in two days, secures his spot in the Commonwealth Games and silences critics who doubted Indian sprinters. The 25-year-old farmer's son credits his family, coaches, and the Reliance Foundation for his groundbreaking success.

Gurindervir Singh is India's fastest man. He broke the 100m national record in the final on Saturday to win the event in 10.09s, becoming the first Indian to dip below 10.10s. People have been frantically searching 'Gurvinder Singh', 'gurvinder singh 100m', 'usian bolt record', 'gurvinder singh athlete' and 'gurindervir singh age' on Google recently to know about the whereabouts of Gurindervir Singh. He stopped the clock at 10.09 seconds to achieve the incredible feat, thus becoming the first from the country to run the men’s 100m in under 10.1 seconds.

In fact, Gurindervir rewrote the national record twice in two days. In the first semifinal on Friday, he clocked 10.17 seconds to surpass Animesh Kujur’s previous national mark of 10.18 seconds. However, Animesh responded in the second semifinal with an even faster 10.15-second run to reclaim the record and secure qualification for the 2026 Commonwealth Games.

A day later, Gurindervir had the final word, sprinting to a stunning 10.09 seconds in the final to reclaim the national record and seal his Common Wealth Games qualification.

Who is Gurindervir Singh?

25-year-old Gurindervir Singh is the son of a farmer in Punjab and made national headlines as he clocked 10.09 seconds in the 100m, reclaiming the national record. The sprinter recalled that when he was just 13 and becoming serious about athletics, several coaches advised him to give up the 100m and shift to the 400m instead. He is the son of retired ASI Kamaljit Singh.

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Hailing from Patiala, he currently trains under coach James Hillier. But his early coach Sarabjit Singh has also played a major role in shaping his career, and Gurvinder still regularly trains with him. Earlier too, Gurvinder had entered the record books at the 2025 Indian Grand Prix after clocking 10.20 seconds in the 100m.

'Not finished yet'

He plastered on his shirt, "Task is 10.10, not finished yet. Wait I am still standing." And just minutes later, the incredible moment came at the National Senior Federation Competition and he made sure nobody forgot it.

The message on his T-shirt appeared to be aimed at social media critics who had recently targeted him online. “People say a lot of things on social media. This message was to remind myself that I am here to perform and improve,” the sprinter said after the race.

“Ever since I started running the 100m at the age of six or seven, people kept telling me there was no future in it and that I should switch to the 400m or some other event. They said Indians don’t have the genes for the 100m. I wanted to prove them wrong. I wanted to prove Indian genes tagde hain,” he told Sportstar.

Gurindervir Singh on his massive success

Later, while speaking to ANI, Gurindervir credited his success to the unwavering support of his family, coaches and support staff. He especially thanked his parents for constantly motivating him, acknowledged the role played by his trainers and dietitian, and praised the Reliance Foundation for providing world-class facilities.

“There are many people I would like to thank. First of all, my family — my father, who inspires me, and my mother, who motivates me. Then my coaches, and every trainer I have worked with over the years. They believed in me and helped me improve. The Reliance Foundation also played a huge role by providing top-class facilities. My dietitian contributed immensely as well. I worked hard, believed in myself, and everyone around me supported me throughout the journey,” he said.

(With agency inputs)

What to Watch

AI outlook — possibilities, not facts

  • Gurindervir Singh will compete in the 2026 Commonwealth Games.

    Very likely · Within months

Open Questions

  • Will Gurindervir Singh be able to maintain this performance level in the Commonwealth Games?
  • What specific training methods contributed most to his breakthrough?
  • How will this success impact the future of sprinting in India?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by Economic Times.

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