KRISTEN CAMPBELL
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Richard Dunn
Practice time is different these days for Kristen Campbell, once
the darling of Corona del Mar High girls volleyball who became
arguably the greatest setter in Atlantic Coast Conference history
while playing for Duke.
While Campbell logs 7 p.m. to 7 a.m. shifts on her nursing
externship at UCLA Medical Center, she is comforted with the fact
that she and her younger sister, Kelly, are not only back in the
Southland but living together in Manhattan Beach.
“We never thought we’d get Kelly back. My parents (Bob and Jean)
knew I’d come back,” Campbell said. “They were scared I might meet
someone and stay on the East Coast.”
In pockets of the good ol’ South, a California beach girl like
Campbell can feel a little like a fish out of water. The first person
she met in Durham, N.C., asked: “We have a volleyball team?”
Coming from winning two national championships at Corona del Mar
in 1992-93, it was a bit of a shock for Campbell, who became so
prolific on the court that the ACC has honored her in its 50th
Anniversary campaign.
In March, the ACC will celebrate the 50 top athletes in all sports
from its first 50 years, and Campbell will be a part of it.
“It’s definitely a huge honor,” Campbell said. “But what I think
is even more, and is definitely my highlight, would be the teammates
and friends I met up there. It’s interesting. I’ve been to weddings
all over the country ... playing volleyball at Duke was definitely
fun. I wouldn’t trade that experience for the world, and I got a
really good education, to boot. It’s such a fun school, and playing
in Cameron Indoor Stadium is an amazing place to play, not that we
packed it like basketball.”
Campbell, who first started playing at local volleyball clinics in
the area during her elementary school years and eventually hooked up
with Coach Charlie Brande at the Orange County Volleyball Club,
enjoyed playing against former CdM teammate Kim Coleman and the UCLA
Bruins in the NCAA Tournament Sweet 16 her freshman year in 1994.
The Atlantic Coast Conference’s all-time assist leader, Campbell
previously was a three-year varsity player at CdM, which captured two
straight CIF Southern Section and CIF State Division I titles, as
well as back-to-back mythical national championships under Coach
Lance Stewart.
An accomplished setter at an early age, Campbell twice earned
All-CIF distinction, before signing with Duke during her senior year
in the fall of 1993.
Following her record-setting career at Duke, where she majored in
developmental psychology, Campbell went to Washington, D.C., for a
year to work in an oncologist’s office, then she “figured out I
wanted to be a nurse practitioner.”
She landed at John Hopkins in Baltimore, where she remained for
two years and worked on a second bachelor’s degree (for a nurse
practitioner). Later, seeking a master’s degree in nursing, she
applied to schools on the West Coast and was accepted at UCLA, where
she’s close to finishing the program.
Campbell, who works primarily in pediatric oncology, is certainly
much more at home now with a 45-minute drive instead of a six-hour
flight to reach her parents’ house in Corona del Mar.
“I really appreciated that time so much,” said Campbell, “because
when I was away, I got to see the whole country and see different
things. It made me appreciate things, like my family and where we
grew up. We were very blessed to grew up there and I’ve enjoyed being
back.”
Campbell, 26, is the latest honoree in the Daily Pilot Sports Hall
of Fame. She has lived with her sister since August, when Kelly
Campbell returned from playing professional volleyball for the St.
Louis Quest, following an All-American career at Colorado.
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