AFI Sets Tough National Record Standards for 2026 CWG Athletics Team

The Athletics Federation of India has unveiled exceptionally high qualification standards for the 2026 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow. With a reduced team size of just 32 athletes, competitors in 17 events must match or surpass existing national records to be considered. Notable athletes like Animesh Kujur and Jyothi Yarraji must improve their personal bests to meet the new benchmarks. The final selection will occur at the Federation Cup in Ranchi, though selectors have discretionary powers for potential medal winners.

Key Points: India's 2026 CWG Athletics Qualification: Toughest Standards Yet

  • Stringent standards for 32-athlete team
  • 17 events require national record performance
  • Federation Cup in Ranchi is final trial
  • Selectors retain discretionary powers
3 min read

Athletics Federation of India reveals qualification criteria for 2026 Commonwealth Games

AFI announces stringent qualification for 2026 Commonwealth Games. Athletes in 17 events must break national records. See the new standards.

"Athletes in as many as 17 events needing to either break or match existing national records - Athletics Federation of India"

New Delhi, February 3

The Athletics Federation of India has announced stringent qualification standards for the 2026 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, with athletes in as many as 17 events needing to either break or match existing national records to be considered for selection.

The CWG 2026, scheduled from July 23 to August 2 in Scotland, will feature a scaled-down athletics programme, restricting each country to a maximum of 32 athletes, including no more than 16 women. In response, AFI has raised the performance bar significantly to ensure a highly competitive Indian contingent, according to olympics.com.

Among the men's events, athletes will be required to surpass national records in the 100m, 400m, 1500m, 110m hurdles and hammer throw. Notably, Animesh Kujur's national mark of 10.18 seconds in the 100m falls just short of the AFI's qualification standard of 10.16 seconds. Similarly, 110m hurdles record holder Tejas Shirse, with a time of 13.41 seconds, is also narrowly below the required cut.

Asian Games silver medallist Jyothi Yarraji, who is returning from an ACL injury, will need to improve her national record of 12.78 seconds in the 100m hurdles to 12.67 seconds to qualify. Meanwhile, Vithya Ramraj, who had equalled PT Usha's long-standing national record of 55.42 seconds in the women's 400m hurdles, must now clock 54.67 seconds to meet the AFI standard.

The men's javelin throw appears to offer more room for multiple qualifiers, with the entry mark set at 82.61 metres. Olympic champion Neeraj Chopra, along with Sachin Yadav and Rohit Yadav, have already crossed this distance in their careers.

AFI has not specified a qualifying standard for the men's 4x400m relay, while the mixed 4x400m relay has been pegged at 3 minutes 16 seconds.

- Men's 100m: 10.16s- Women's 100m: 11.17s- Men's 400m: 44.96s- Women's 400m: 51.36s- Men's 1500m: 3:30.82- Women's 1500m: 4:05.09- Men's 5000m: 13:19.64- Women's 5000m: 14:56.60- Men's 10,000m: 27:39.03- Women's 10,000m: 31:14.14

AFI confirmed that the Federation Cup in Ranchi, scheduled from May 22 to 25, will act as the final selection trials for the Commonwealth Games. Athletes who have already achieved the qualifying marks earlier in the season will also be required to participate.

However, the federation retains the right to exempt athletes in exceptional circumstances. Selectors will also have discretionary powers to include competitors who may not have met the standards but are viewed as strong medal prospects.

Unlike the Olympics, where qualification criteria are uniform worldwide, Commonwealth Games standards are set individually by each participating nation.

At the Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games, India won 61 medals overall, with athletics contributing eight, including one gold. The country's best-ever CWG performance came at the 2010 CWG in New Delhi, when India topped 100 medals.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
My heart goes out to athletes like Animesh Kujur and Tejas Shirse. They are national record holders and still need to improve by hundredths of a second! The standards seem brutally tight. Hope they can make that final push.
R
Rohit P
Good to see the discretionary clause. Sometimes an athlete might have a bad day at the trials but is a proven performer. We can't just rely on one race. Smart move by the selectors to keep that option.
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Sarah B
Wishing Jyothi Yarraji a speedy and full recovery from her ACL injury. To come back and have to break your own national record is a huge ask. She's a fighter though! All the best to her and Vithya Ramraj.
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Vikram M
While I understand the need for high standards, this feels a bit demotivating for upcoming talent. If even national record holders are struggling to qualify, what message does it send to younger athletes? The focus should be on building a pipeline, not just one Games.
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Nikhil C
The javelin squad looks strong! Neeraj Chopra is a given, but having multiple athletes over 82.61m shows real depth. This is how you build a dominant event. Hope other disciplines can learn from this.
K
Kavya N

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