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Sports India News Updated Jun 13, 2026

Tejas Shirse Shatters National Record in 110m Hurdles, Eyes CWG 2026

Indian hurdler Tejas Shirse set a new national record of 13.27 seconds in the men's 110m hurdles at the Indian Athletics Series 9. The 24-year-old surpassed his own previous record of 13.41 seconds and the CWG qualification standard of 13.39 seconds. His performance ranks sixth in Asia for the 2026 season and could make him the first Indian male hurdler at the Commonwealth Games since 2014. Meanwhile, Mohammad Afsal P fell short in the 800m, and javelin throwers vie for spots with Neeraj Chopra injured.

Hurdler Tejas Shirse breaches national record, CWG qualification mark

Ludhiana, June 13

Indian hurdler Tejas Shirse delivered a landmark performance at the Indian Athletics Series 9 on Saturday, clocking a stunning 13.27 seconds in the men's 110m hurdles to set a new national record and strengthen his case for a place in the 2026 Commonwealth Games squad.

The 24-year-old athlete eclipsed his own national record of 13.41 seconds set in 2024, producing one of the finest sprint-hurdle performances by an Indian athlete. His effort also comfortably surpassed the Athletics Federation of India's Commonwealth Games qualification standard of 13.39 seconds.

Running in the B final, Shirse exploded out of the blocks and established an early lead. Despite clipping the final hurdle, he maintained his momentum to the finish line, stopping the clock at 13.27 seconds. Krishik M finished second in 13.55 seconds but was never able to close the gap on the record-breaking hurdler.

The timing represents a significant leap from Shirse's gold medal-winning run of 13.50 seconds at last month's Federation Cup in Ranchi and places him among Asia's leading performers this season. His 13.27-second effort currently ranks sixth on the continental list for 2026.

The achievement carries additional significance for Indian athletics. If selected, Shirse could become the first Indian male hurdler to compete at the Commonwealth Games since Siddharth Thingalaya's appearance in 2014.

Elsewhere, national record holder Mohammad Afsal P endured a disappointing outing in the men's 800m, clocking 1:47.00 and falling short of the 1:45.00 qualification standard, a result that may end his hopes of making the Commonwealth Games team.

Attention later shifted to the men's javelin throw competition, where several athletes were chasing qualification marks. With World Championships finalist Sachin Yadav sidelined by an elbow injury and double Olympic medallist Neeraj Chopra continuing his recovery from injury, throwers including Rohit Yadav, Shivam Lohakare and Kishore Kumar Jena remained in contention for a place in the national squad.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Arjun K

Matter of pride for Indian athletics! 🎉 The way he clipped the last hurdle and still managed 13.27 is amazing. If he works on that technique bit, we might see 13.1 or even 13 flat in the next couple of years. Long time no Indian male hurdler in CWG since Thingalaya in 2014 - hope he ends that drought!

Priya S

Jio, this is fantastic! 🇮🇳 But I'm also a bit worried about Mohammad Afsal P - he missed the 800m mark by 2 seconds. At this level, that's a huge gap. Hope he recovers well for future events. The javelin lineup without Neeraj and Sachin looks thin though... let's see who steps up.

Rohit P

Tejas Shirse 🔥🔥 Running 13.27 in the B final says a lot about his mindset - no backing down regardless of competition. Also, 6th best in Asia this season is no joke. If he keeps this trajectory, CWG medal is not impossible. AFI must give him proper support now - don't let another talent fade away because of lack of resources.

Kavya N

Wonderful achievement! But can we talk about how this was done in the B final? Why wasn't he in the main draw? Indian athletics needs more organized meets where top hurdlers face each other. Anyway, congratulations Tejas! You're making Ludhiana proud. 😊

Siddharth J

What a day for Indian athletics! 🇮🇳🏅 Tejas Shirse rewriting records, but also sad to see Mohammad Afsal P struggling. These are

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