Nigerian sprinting has a new global marker after Kayinsola Ajayi was listed by World Athletics at No. 83 in the men’s overall rankings and No. 5 in the men’s 100m rankings.
The World Athletics reports Ajayi with a ranking score of 1,340, placing him fifth in the men’s 100m and 83rd in the men’s overall ranking. The supplied report says the rise makes him the first Nigerian sprinter to break into the World Athletics men’s overall top 100.
The ranking rise gives Nigerian athletics another major multi-sport story beyond football, with Ajayi now placed among the world’s leading men’s 100m athletes.
Reports from World Athletics lists Ajayi’s 2026 season-best table, including 9.84 NR and 9.84 =NR legal 100m marks, while a 9.72 run is marked with an asterisk as not legal because of wind assistance.
According to the World Athletics , Ajayi’s climb has been driven by a strong season that included NCAA 60m and 100m titles, as well as a 9.84-second performance at the Prefontaine Classic Diamond League meeting in Eugene, where he equalled his Nigerian record in the men’s 100m.
The wider significance is that the World Athletics overall rankings compare athletes across disciplines, not only within one event. The supplied report says the system considers performance quality and placing score, with an athlete’s overall ranking determined by the average of their best performances during the ranking period.
Ajayi is not Nigeria’s only top-100 presence. The national 400m hurdles record holder Ezekiel Nathaniel remains Nigeria’s highest-ranked athlete in the men’s overall standings at 17th, while shot putter Chukwuebuka Enekwechi has previously been a regular Nigerian representative in the overall top 100.
For Ajayi, the ranking is more than a personal milestone. It strengthens Nigeria’s visibility in global athletics at a time when the country is looking beyond football for major international performance stories.
It also gives Nigerian sprinting a fresh name in the conversation before the next major championship window.