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Brianna Rollins equalled the fourth fastest 100 metres hurdles ever run as she clocked a stunning 12.26 seconds at the U.S. world championship trials on Saturday at Des Moines, Iowa.
Finally catching an allowable wind, the 21-year-old U.S. collegiate record holder sent a strong message to Australian Olympic and world champion Sally Pearson with the fastest time since 1992.
Only Bulgarian Yordanka Donkova, whose 1988 world record is 12.21 seconds, and compatriot Ginka Zagorcheva, the former record holder, have run faster. Donkova has done so twice.
"I just feel so overwhelmed, so emotional. It is so amazing," said Rollins, who previous best was 12.39 seconds at the U.S. collegiate championships.
The time, run with an aiding wind of 1.2 seconds, exceeded Pearson's 2011 world championship best of 12.28 seconds and three times world champion Gail Devers' American record of 12.33 seconds.
"Looks like I am bringing my A++ game to worlds this year," Pearson tweeted after the stunning run.
Can Rollins, who recently turned professional, break the world record?
"I don't know. We'll see," said the former Clemson University student, whose best before this season was 12.70 seconds.
Lured to athletics as a teenager "because someone told me I was fast," Rollins selected the hurdles "because I thought it was interesting and fun to do."
Runner-up Queen Harrison (12.43 seconds), third-place finisher Nia Ali (12.48) and Beijing Olympic winner Dawn Harper, who has a wild card entry, also made the American team for the Aug 10-18 world championships in Moscow.
There were season-leading performances in the men's 400 metres hurdles and women's high jump finals on a hot and windy day.
Olympic silver medallist Michael Tinsley became the first man to dip under 48 seconds in the 400 hurdles this season, running 47.96 seconds, and Brigetta Barrett, the London high jump runner-up, cleared 2.04 metres (6 feet, 8.25 inches).
Former world champions Kerron Clement (48.06) and Bershawn Jackson (48.09) joined Tinsley on the U.S. team for Moscow.
Teenage sensation Mary Cain, just 17, also made the team, finishing second to teammate Treniere Moser with a gutsy run in a slow women's 1,500 metres.
Beijing gold medallist LaShawn Merritt dominated the men's 400 metres final, winning in 44.21 seconds, but London women's winner Sanya Richards-Ross was a casualty of the cut-throat trials, missing out on a place in the individual 400m.
Running in sneakers to lessen the pain from recent big toe surgery, the American record holder finished sixth in 51.92 seconds. Natasha Hastings won the race in 49.94.
World record holder Ashton Eaton played it safe but still won the decathlon with 8,291 points.
Tyson Gay, going for a sprint double, easily advanced in 200 metres qualifying, running a wind-assisted 20.14 seconds just hours after claiming Friday's 100 metres title in a world-leading 9.75 seconds.
Olympic champions Aries Merritt and Allyson Felix also moved through qualifying but London gold medallist Brittney Reese fouled three times in the women's long jump final and will use a wild card spot to compete in Moscow.
World record holder Merritt clocked a wind-assisted 13.25 seconds in his first 110 metres hurdles since a May injury.
Felix was fifth fastest in the women's 200 in 22.44, also wind-assisted.
Three-times national champion David Oliver looked especially sharp in the hurdles, clocking a wind-assisted 13.14 seconds.