All posts tagged: Tejas Shirse 110m hurdles

Tejas Shirse breaks 110m hurdles national record, qualifies for CWG | Sports News

Tejas Shirse breaks 110m hurdles national record, qualifies for CWG | Sports News

2 min readJun 13, 2026 01:56 PM IST Top Indian hurdler Tejas Shirse broke his own national record at Indian Athletics Series 9 in Ludhiana on Saturday with a timing of 13.27 seconds. He also breached the Commonwealth Games qualification mark of 13.39 seconds set by the Athletics Federation of India. Indian Athletics Series in Ludhiana is serving as the last qualification tournament for the Commonwealth Games scheduled in July 2026. Tejas lowered his previous record of 13.41s that he had clocked in 2024. His timing is the sixth best Asian timing of the season. If Tejas gets selected for the Commonwealth Games squad, he will become first Indian male hurdler to feature in the event after Siddharth Thingalaya in 2014. Running in the Final B of 110m hurdles, Tejas started quickly off the blocks and left the rest of the field behind with just Krishik M pushing him. Despite knocking the final hurdle, Tejas crossed the finish line at 13.27s while Krishik finished second with 13.55s. In the men’s 800m event, national record holder …

From selling shoes on Instagram, how Tejas Shirse went on to set national record in 110m hurdles | Sport-others News

As soon as Tejas Shirse completed his national record-breaking 110m hurdles race at the Monet Grand Prix in Finland on Wednesday, he walked up to his coach James Hillier, embraced the Welshman and poured out his heart in gratitude. Shirse, who clocked 13.41s to erase Siddhanth Thingalaya’s mark of 13.48s, didn’t have the best start with coach Hillier, the athletics director at Reliance Foundation. “It was quite challenging in the early weeks and months, and he’ll attest that. He’s not the easiest person at times, but he has listened, improved and is now a wonderful young man,” says Hillier, who has been training Shirse since December 2022. Tejas, who grew up in Aurangabad, comes from a farming family with no link to sports. Neither did he have any innate interest in it. “I was a mischievous student in school. I was good at studies but never liked to sit in class. I realised I could bunk classes if I trained for sports and that’s how it started. I trained for cricket and then athletics,” recalls …