Teenage sprinter Dina Asher-Smith has become the fastest British woman in history - and says she can go quicker.
The Londoner, 19, set a British 100m record of 11.02 seconds at the World Challenge Meeting in the Netherlands.
She was second behind Dutchwoman Dafne Schippers, who won in a time of 10.94 - but Asher-Smith's time beat Montell Douglas's 11.05 GB record set in 2008.
"I think it being May is hopefully a good point for me to go faster later in the season," said Asher-Smith.
Asha Philip, 24, set the third fastest time by a British woman (11.10) in Hengelo, to finish third.
Asher-Smith, the world 100m junior champion who won a silver medal in the European Indoor 60m in March, said she could have started better in Sunday's race.
"I was absolutely over the moon. I really wasn't expecting to run that time with the kind of race that I ran so I was really happy," she said.
"I've got a few things to work on so I think that points to me being able to replicate and do a bit better later in the season."
(BBC)