Ogazi competed for the first time since his NCAA title win and will take positives from the outing as he also builds towards Tokyo and the rest of the season.

There was disappointment for Nigerian sprint fans as Kanyinsola Ajayi withdrew from the men’s 100m before the start, with Jamaica’s Kadrian Goldson stepping in to fill his lane. The final was won by Jamaica’s Kishane Thompson in 9.95s, ahead of Ghana’s Abdul-Rasheed Saminu and South Africa’s Akani Simbine, who both clocked 10.01s for joint second place.

The meeting’s headline performance came from Swedish pole vault sensation Mondo Duplantis, who broke his own world record with a clearance of 6.29m. Returning to the same Budapest stadium where he won the 2023 world title, Duplantis was pushed early on by Greece’s Emmanouil Karalis, with both men clearing 6.02m on their first attempts. Karalis exited the competition after two misses at 6.11m, while Duplantis soared over the height before setting the bar at the new world record mark, which he cleared on his second attempt. The performance added one centimetre to the global record he set in Stockholm in June and reaffirmed his status as one of the sport’s dominant figures.