Indian hurdling star Jyothi Yarraji announced her return to the track in emphatic fashion, clocking 13.14 seconds in Heat 1 of the women’s 100m hurdles at the 65th National Inter-State Senior Athletics Championships to comfortably breach the Asian Games qualification standard of 13.34 seconds.

The performance was significant not just because it secured qualification for the 2026 Asian Games in Nagoya, but because it marked the comeback of one of India’s brightest athletics stars after a lengthy injury layoff.

Competing in her first race of the 2026 season, Yarraji looked sharp and composed as she cruised to the top spot in her heat, sending a strong message to her rivals ahead of the final.

The road back has been anything but easy.

In July last year, the reigning Asian champion suffered a freak knee injury during training, bringing her season to an abrupt halt and ruling her out of the World Athletics Championships in Tokyo. The injury eventually required surgery and sidelined her for the remainder of the 2025 season.

At the time, the setback was particularly cruel. Yarraji was coming off one of the best phases of her career, having successfully defended her Asian Championships title and established herself among the world’s leading hurdlers. The injury not only ended her hopes of competing at the World Championships but also interrupted the momentum she had built over several seasons.

After spending seven months away from competition, Yarraji returned to training only earlier this year, carefully rebuilding her strength and confidence under the guidance of her support team. Her coach James Hillier had repeatedly stressed that the Asian Games would be the primary target for her comeback season.

On Tuesday, she showed exactly why.

Running her first competitive race since the injury, the national record holder looked in complete control, clocking 13.14 seconds—well inside the Asian Games qualification mark and a highly encouraging start to a season that could culminate with another continental medal.

For Indian athletics, the result is a major boost. Yarraji remains the country’s premier hurdler, a two-time Asian champion and the national record holder in the event. More importantly, she is once again healthy, competing, and already meeting the standards required for India’s biggest targets of the year.