Thursday, May 24, 2018 | 2 a.m.
Other honorees
- Female Athlete of the Year: Tatum Spangler, Coronado softball
- Male Athlete of the Year: Ty Smith, Virgin Valley wrestling
- Unsung Hero: Chely Arias, Cheyenne trainer
- Male Rising Star: Ma’a Gaoteote, Faith Lutheran football
- Female rising star: Audrey Boch-Collins, Clark tennis
- Moment of the Year: Nick Doland, Chaparral basketball
- Game of the Year: Centennial vs. Liberty girls' basketball state championship
- Hank Greenspun Lifetime Achievement Award: Paul Nihipali, Chaparral football
- Female Team of the Year: Coronado flag football
- Male Team of the Year: Bishop Gorman basketball
- Female Scholar Athlete of the Year: Haylee Niemann, Arbor View soccer
- Male Scholar Athlete of the Year: James Bridges, Clark basketball
- Citizen of the Year Hannah Barr: Basic softball
- Coach of the Year: Joe Sawaia, Coronado golf
Nick Campbell’s track times weren’t great this spring. But that was the least of the Coronado High sophomore sprinter’s worries.
Campbell survived the Oct. 1 mass shooting on the Strip, where one of the bullets that rained down on concertgoers ripped through his right shoulder. Two inches to the left and the bullet would have hit his head and likely killed him.
So when Campbell’s time in the 400 meters went from 55.14 seconds in 2017 to 56.53 this spring, he knew it wasn’t the number that mattered. Rather, it’s not being one of the massacre’s 58 casualties.
Simply competing was important, and that’s why Campbell received the Sun Standout Award. It’s reserved for excellence and only awarded in exceptional situations.
“The more and more I run, the better my stamina will get,” he says. “It’s like a balloon. The more you inflate it, the bigger and stronger it gets.”
Campbell was rushed to University Medical Center and immediately treated to save his life. A tube was inserted into his chest to expand his lungs and help with breathing. A few months later, he was playing junior varsity basketball for Coronado. In the spring, he returned to the track team.
Breathing wasn’t easy, especially when running sprints. He could have quit, and teammates wouldn’t have questioned his desire. But that wasn’t an option he considered.
Aside from constantly having to show friends the bullet wound scar on his shoulder and making the occasional appearance on national television to tell his story, Campbell is determined to have a normal high school experience. “I feel I am the same person,” he says. “I still want to be a 16-year-old kid.”
He got shot. He almost died. But he didn’t, and there are plenty more games to compete in. “After a game, sometimes I will think, ‘Wow, I just did all that and I was in the hospital a few months ago,’ ” he says.
This story originally appeared in the Las Vegas Weekly.