Latest News About Eddie Nketia Australia 100M Time

Updated 2026-05-18 05:07

Here’s what I can share right now: Eddie Nketia has been reported by several outlets in April–May 2026 as having posted a wind-assisted 100m time around 9.84 seconds, which would be the fastest all-conditions 100m for Australia but is not eligible for official record purposes due to a tailwind. Multiple pieces also note his switch to represent Australia late last year and his involvement with USC in collegiate events [sources referenced in the notes below]. Please note that wind-assisted marks are not recognized as national records.

Key points to know

What this means for you

Would you like me to pull the latest official results and wind readings from Athletics Australia and major meet reports to confirm the current wind-legal Australian best and Nketia’s most recent official times? I can also provide a concise timeline of his key performances and where the wind legality affected record eligibility.

Sources

Fast Eddie Nketia adds fuel to Australia's sprinting ambitions

MELBOURNE, April 20 - A week after Australians absorbed Gout Gout's impressive 200 metres run at national championships, excitement surged again as the unheralded Eddie Nketia clocked a wind-assisted 9.84 seconds in the 100m at a U.S. college meet over the weekend. Read more at straitstimes.com. Read more at straitstimes.com.

www.straitstimes.com

Fast Eddie Nketia adds fuel to Australia's sprinting ambitions - CNA

MELBOURNE, April 20 : A week after Australians absorbed Gout Gout's impressive 200 metres run at national championships, excitement surged again as the unheralded Eddie Nketia clocked a wind-assisted 9.84 seconds in the 100m at a U.S. college meet over the weekend.New Zealand-born Nketia only switched allegi

www.channelnewsasia.com

Eddie Nketia takes home 100m gold on Day 6 of the Australian ...

17-year-old ACT athlete Eddie Nketia won the coveted Australian 100m at the Championships in Sydney in a time of 10.22, ahead of Rohan Browning (10.28) and Jack Hale (10.34). Nketia comes from a brilliant pedigree of pace with his father (Gus Nketia) being the New Zealand national record holder (10.11). He wasn’t sure he had

www.athletics.com.au