Los Angeles Times

Gymnast Chae Campbell thrives in UCLA’s team-first environmen­t.

Pac-12 freshman of the year, thriving in a team-first climate, ready for all-around at NCAA championsh­ips.

- By Thuc Nhi Nguyen

When Chae Campbell tumbles across the floor and sticks double back tucks, fans see one of UCLA’s rising stars. The freshman’s tumbling is powerful. Her leaps are graceful. Her dance is captivatin­g.

But Mom always knows best, so Leila Campbell is fixated on something else when her daughter competes. It’s Campbell’s smile.

“I see that she’s happy,” Leila said.

Competing on a team for the first time in her gymnastics career, Chae Campbell is thriving in UCLA’s teamfirst environmen­t. She will finish an impressive freshman season at the NCAA championsh­ips Friday in Fort Worth, where she qualified as an individual in the all-around. Senior Nia Dennis and junior Margzetta Frazier also made the cut as individual­s (vault and bars, respective­ly).

It’s the first time since 2006 that the Bruins didn’t advance to nationals as a team, but their three representa­tives demonstrat­e just how far a team’s support can take athletes who were accustomed to competing alone.

“If you can give yourself to your team and you do your work, it’s just freeing,” UCLA coach Chris Waller said. “It feels like you’re flying with the team putting the wind underneath your wings.”

Being on a team was intimidati­ng for Campbell at first. Even competing in practice meets made her nervous. She felt terrible when she fell on bars during the season opener in the leadoff position. The mistake could hurt UCLA’s team score, she thought.

Instead, the Bruins rallied behind their freshman. UCLA responded with five straight successful routines that erased Campbell’s fall from the score sheet.

Three months later, Campbell, now the Pac-12 freshman/newcomer of the year and the first UCLA freshman to win an individual conference title since Kyla Ross, can chuckle at the mishap. It led to one of her favorite moments of the season.

No, it’s not the title-winning performanc­es that stick with Campbell. It was watching junior Sara Taubman compete for the first time and step up after Campbell’s fall.

For a longtime individual competitor, it showed just what the Bruins could achieve together.

“You hear a lot [that] a lot of people regain their joy for gymnastics [in college],” said Campbell, the Pac-12 cofloor champion. “To experience it for myself was something really special.”

Many elite-level female gymnasts have a tortured relationsh­ip with the sport. Olympic dreams begin early and a simple weekend class intended to burn off some energy quickly turns into 40 hours of training a week. Coaches can be abusive. Training is backbreaki­ng.

Campbell’s experience in the sport was not as tumultuous as some of her peers, although it was strained at times. The 5-foot-7 gymnast always stuck out in a sport where short, slim body types are the norm. Her height was a reason she retired from Olympic-level gymnastics, where the bars are set at a specific height and width between bars. Campbell had to contort her body in order to navigate the close quarters.

The other reason was a severe knee injury suffered in 2017 while training for the national championsh­ips. She tore multiple ligaments and fractured her tibia.

While recovering, she evaluated what she wanted out of gymnastics. No more chasing a far-fetched Olympic dream. She wanted to rededicate herself to the goal she first imagined at 8 years old: attending UCLA.

Campbell was so focused on UCLA that she didn’t reply to recruiting letters from any other school. UCLA was the only campus she visited.

After Campbell won the U.S. junior vault title as an elite gymnast in 2016 and was named to the Junior Olympic national team twice, Waller had high expectatio­ns for her impact at UCLA. She’s exceeded all of them.

“In terms of building character, excellence, winning championsh­ips, academics, she’s really the ultimate Bruin,” Waller said.

The 19-year-old Campbell is already an example for older teammates like Dennis, the team’s two-time viral sensation. Dennis said she looks to Campbell on hard days, telling herself she needs to “get like Chae.”

“She’s seriously that good,” Dennis said.

Nothing seems to rattle Campbell. After her scary fall on bars in the season opener, the Carrollton, Texas, native bounced back to hit routines on beam and floor, and smiled through it all.

The daughter of a single mother, Campbell learned long ago not to stress over things out of her control.

Chae Campbell watched Leila return to college for a business degree while working a full-time job and raising a child. There was just no time to worry about the twists and turns of life, Leila said. Chae applies that lesson to her gymnastics, especially after the COVID-19 pandemic.

“She stayed positive, hoping and praying that there will be an opportunit­y for her to have a season when she gets to the NCAA[s],” Leila said. “Every day, it’s like nothing is guaranteed but just be thankful for whatever you do get.”

When Chae Campbell arrives in her home state for her NCAA championsh­ips debut, she won’t just be content with qualifying for the exclusive meet.

With an upgraded vault that would boost her start value to 10.0 from 9.95, Campbell is “in it to win it,” she said.

Campbell is happy to gamble on the upgraded vault because she won’t be jeopardizi­ng her team’s scores, but she is disappoint­ed to be competing competing as an individual Friday.

She is dedicating her performanc­e to the teammates who lined the driveway off campus with signs and cheers as UCLA’s three national qualifiers left for the meet.

“When I go out there, I’m competing for my team,” Campbell said.

Without her whole team at nationals, Campbell will rotate with Louisiana State. The Tigers welcomed Campbell on Twitter this week, and LSU gymnast Haleigh Bryant posted the team has already learned Campbell’s floor routine. Campbell will have a new set of backup dancers ready.

LSU, the third-ranked team in the country, celebrates successful routines by passing around a stick crown.

The jeweled piece of plastic goes to a gymnast after they nail a landing. On Friday, it could help mark a coronation for Campbell on a national stage.

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? PAC-12 FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR Chae Campbell says she’s “in it to win it” when she competes as an individual Friday at the NCAA championsh­ips in Texas.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times PAC-12 FRESHMAN OF THE YEAR Chae Campbell says she’s “in it to win it” when she competes as an individual Friday at the NCAA championsh­ips in Texas.

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