New Zealand runner Maia Ramsden has smashed the national women's 1500m record and gone within a whisker of Olympic qualification at a high profile meet in Los Angeles.
Ramsden clocked 4 minutes 2.58 seconds to place 11th in a quality field at the USATF Grand Prix meet, featuring some of the world's premier middle distance runners.
It knocked more than 2 seconds off the former New Zealand record of 4:04.82, set by Nikki Hamblin in Spain 13 years ago.
But painfully for the US-based Ramsden, her time was eight-hundredths of a second outside the Olympic qualifying standard of 4:02.50.
A decorated performer at NCAA meets running for Harvard University, Ramsden has stated her desire to qualify for this year's Games in Paris and took a giant step forward.
She obliterated her own previous personal best of 4:06.51, set at the world indoor championships in Glasgow two months ago.
The 22-year-old was nearly 5 seconds under her former best outdoors time, set at the Millrose Games in New York in February.
Ramsden was dragged along by a rapid pace in Los Angeles, with the race won by Ethiopian Diribe Welteji in 3:55.25.
She spent much of the race near the tail of the 17-woman group but gradually made up ground.
Meanwhile, veteran shot putter Tom Walsh, who has already qualified for the Olympics, was well below his best at the same meet.
His best distance of 21.02m was only good enough for seventh place, nearly 2m behind American winner and long-time rival Joe Kovacs, who threw 22.93m.