World Athletics has blocked Favour Ofili’s attempt to switch allegiance from Nigeria to Turkey. The ruling goes beyond one athlete. It sends a clear message about how the sport wants nationality changes handled. The panel rejected 11 requests linked to Turkey. It said a coordinated recruitment drive sat behind them.
Why World Athletics said no
The panel said Turkey’s push raised a bigger integrity problem. Reports have it that officials tied the applications to a government-backed effort that offered lucrative contracts through a state-funded club. The panel said that kind of strategy weakens transfer rules and blurs the idea of genuine national ties.
World Athletics did not treat it as a routine switch. It treated it as a test case. The governing body wanted to show that transfer rules still have force.

Why the case hits hard in Nigeria
Ofili’s case carries extra weight in Nigeria because her frustration did not come from nowhere. According to reports, during the Paris 2024 Olympics she said Nigerian officials failed to enter her for the women’s 100 metres, even though she had qualified. That dispute helps explain why a move away from Nigeria felt serious and personal.
Ofili is also one of Nigeria’s top sprint talents. In May 2025, World Athletics said she became the first woman to run 150 metres in under 16 seconds when she clocked 15.85 in Atlanta. So this is not a minor paperwork story. It involves one of the country’s most visible athletes.
What the ruling means now
The decision blocks Ofili from representing Turkey in official international competitions. But it does not stop her entire career. The affected athletes can still live and train in Turkey. They can also compete in road races and club events. What they cannot do is wear Turkey’s colors at national representative meets under this application.

The bigger fight behind the ruling
World Athletics tightened these rules in 2019. The sport did that to stop nationality switches driven mainly by money or medal planning. The ruling shows that the body wants to stop recruitment-led allegiance changes before they become normal.
So two truths now sit side by side. Ofili had real reasons to feel let down in Nigeria. But World Athletics still chose to defend the rule system over her switch. That is what gives this story its force. It is no longer only about Ofili. It is about who gets to represent a country, and why.
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