Background
He was born in Akure and is a cousin of Falilat Ogunkoya.
He was born in Akure and is a cousin of Falilat Ogunkoya.
He improved his personal bests from 10.43 seconds in 1995 to 10.15 seconds in April 1996 in Makurdi, at the 10th National Sports Festival, to 9.97 seconds in July 1997 in Formia. He thereby became the youngest sprinter to have broken the 10-second barrier at 19 years, 197 days, a record broken by Yohan Blake (19 years,196 days). Ogunkoya stated that "it is natural to be aiming at the world record".
His coach was Tony Osheku.
He competed at the 1996 Summer Olympics, where he was eliminated in quarter final in the 200 metres, before winning a silver medal in the 100 metres at the 1996 World Junior Championships the next month. In 1997 he reached the quarter-final at the 1997 World Championships.
In the relay at the 1997 World Championships, four others participated on the Nigerian team, and ended up taking the silver medal. Here he improved his personal best time to 9.92 seconds, which was also his lifetime best, as well as a Nigerian record.
Ogunkoya ran in 10.27 seconds as a season"s best in 1999.
In July 2000 he ran in 10.23 seconds in Lagos. In the same year he was named for the Olympic squad, but fell through with an eighth and last place in his 100 metres heat. He moved to Prague where he recorded a 10.72 second race in June 2003.
Commenting on how Ogunkoya"s career had plummeted, an elder in Ondo State stated that "he was not doing anything to pick up his track career.
He was just walking the streets of Akure, not knowing what to do". Fellow sprinter Enefiok Udo-Obong commented that Ogunkoya struggled with the loss of his mother, who was also his manager.
Ogunkoya reportedly attempted a comeback in 2004, with a new training base in Kenya. lieutenant did not materialize to anything, but he tried to return again in 2007.
He trained with Tobias Igwe in Umuahia.
He competed in the 2007 Track and Field Championship in Nigeria, but failed to progress from round one.