Los Angeles Times

Frazier answers call from Jackson

UCLA gymnast turns in career performanc­e after unexpected nod from the pop star.

- By Thuc Nhi Nguyen

Sleeping before a meet against No. 3 Utah on Friday, Margzetta Frazier was jolted awake by a text.

“We’ll call in one minute,” it read.

The UCLA junior bolted out of bed, franticall­y wiped her eyes and fixed her hair. She picked up a FaceTime call and saw a woman whose face was covered by dark sunglasses, a mask and a scarf. But once Frazier heard the woman’s soft voice, the UCLA junior knew who it was. Janet Jackson. Frazier, whose viral floor routine is a tribute to the pop star, started to cry. Jackson wished her luck in the meet, asked for tumbling advice and called Frazier an inspiratio­n. That made her cry again.

With Jackson’s support, Frazier put on a career performanc­e with two personal bests as UCLA set a seasonhigh in a 197.225-197.1 loss to Utah. Behind Frazier’s career-high 9.925 on beam, the 14th-ranked Bruins (4-1, 3-1 Pac-12) had a season-high 49.425 score on the event and tied their best score for any event this year.

“She’s never been like that on beam,” head coach Chris Waller said. “She was up there making it look flawless by making these tiny adjustment­s that weren’t deductible.”

When the score flashed on the scoreboard Frazier didn’t believe it was hers. It completed a strong comeback after she began the meet with a career-low 9.7 on bars. Frazier, a two-time All-American in the event, was angry after the mistake, but Waller pulled her aside with the perfect message.

“Janet didn’t make it to where she was by not bouncing back,” Waller said.

Frazier responded with a career-high 9.875 on vault then followed with a 9.85 on floor, where her routine is set to a medley of Jackson hits including “Nasty,” “If” and “Throb.” The former U.S. national team member mixes in her tumbling and leaps with iconic Jackson choreograp­hy.

The intricate steps from the famous dance break in “If” in which Frazier makes angular shapes with her arms while shuffling her feet in and out could easily trip up most dancers, Jackson said on the FaceTime call. But Frazier didn’t miss a beat.

“I think you are incredible, I think you are beautiful,” Jackson told a teary-eyed Frazier on the phone call that was posted to Instagram.

“She is the reason why I love gymnastics,” Frazier said after the meet. “I really try my best to make it a performanc­e to entertain and that’s because of her.”

Frazier’s score on floor helped UCLA cut into a large 0.25-point Utah lead after two rotations. Led by a careerhigh 9.95 from freshman Chae Campbell, UCLA outscored Utah 49.4-49.25 on the third event and trailed by onetenth of a point entering the final rotation.

The Bruins, who counted a fall on beam in the last meet against Washington, knew they had to have their best performanc­e for a chance to win the meet. They did that and left the gym celebratin­g, despite the final score.

“We told each other that we were going to do it for each other,” said Campbell, who scored a 9.85 on the event and tied her career-high in the allaround with a 39.425. “Even though it didn’t end up winning the meet, we still proved that we can still hit a beam routine in any situation.”

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