Blessing Ogundiran won the women’s 100m title at Nigeria’s Commonwealth Games trials, clocking 11.12 seconds at the Yaba College of Technology Sports Complex in Lagos to be crowned the meet’s fastest woman. The Warner University, Florida athlete edged a competitive field to claim the headline sprint of the selection event.

How Ogundiran sealed the Commonwealth Games trials sprint
Running into a slight headwind of -0.5m/s, Ogundiran controlled the final from the gun and held off a fast-finishing challenge to stop the clock at 11.12 seconds. Miracle Ezechukwu pushed her all the way and took second in 11.15 seconds, a career-best run, while Olayinka Olajide completed the podium in 11.28 seconds.
Ogundiran said she kept her focus simple under pressure. “When I was at the start block, I was thinking of what my coach told me, that I should just execute my race and not panic,” she said after the win. Her composure paid off in one of the tightest women’s sprint finals of the campaign.
Other winners at the Lagos meet
The sprint was not the only standout result on the day. Veteran shot putter Chukwuebuka Enekwechi claimed a record fifth national title with a throw of 21.46 metres, underlining his long dominance in the field events. In the hammer throw, Oyesade Oyetayo took the top spot with a best of 65.07 metres.
Ezechukwu’s personal best in the 100m did more than secure silver. Her performance qualified her for the Ben Aghazu Excellence in Athletics Prize, an award that recognises outstanding home-based athletes and rewards those building their careers within Nigeria rather than abroad.
Why the Commonwealth Games trials matter
The trials are the main gateway for athletes hoping to wear the green and white at the Commonwealth Games. Strong, verifiable times at a national meet give selectors hard evidence to work with and put pressure on established names to defend their places. For Ogundiran, the title is a clear marker that she belongs among the country’s top sprinters.
The meet also offered a useful read on Nigeria’s depth in the short sprints, where three women dipped close to or under 11.3 seconds in the same final. That kind of competition tends to raise standards across a squad, as athletes chase the qualifying marks and the limited number of slots on the team.
With the final events, including the men’s 100m semifinals and finals, set to close out the programme, the Lagos trials capped a busy stretch for Nigerian track and field. The results give coaches plenty to study as they shape the line-up for the Commonwealth Games and the wider international season ahead.
For home-based competitors in particular, performances like Ezechukwu’s are a reminder that progress is possible without leaving the domestic circuit. The blend of US-based and home-trained athletes on the podium reflects a system still drawing talent from several directions as the country builds toward the Games.
Nigeria has a proud sprint heritage, from past Olympic relay medals to a steady stream of fast women on the continental stage. Each new trials cycle is a chance to refresh that line of talent and to test whether the next generation can match the marks set by those who came before them. Ogundiran’s 11.12-second run places her firmly in that conversation as the season builds.
Attention now turns to how the selectors finalise the team and which athletes confirm their fitness in the weeks ahead. For the winners crowned in Lagos, the work is far from over, but a national title is a strong platform to carry into the bigger meets still to come on the calendar.