SThursday, August 8, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Greg Garno: From walk-on, to broken records, to agony: Matt Campbell's tragic end to a career Thursday, August 8, 2013 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 3 Researchers find donor personality a factor for patients By GREG GARNO Managing Sports Editor This isn't the heartwarming story you're looking for. There's no climactic finish. There's no record broken or lasting legacy. There isn't even the agony of defeat or coming within inches of victory. For Matt Campbell there were tears shed, a surgery to sit through and a moment in front of his com- puter to follow what could have .hcen his season. But it needs to be told. Really, it deserved to be told months ago. After all, his story, according to his biography on the Athletic Department's website, ends like this: "Helped the 4x100-meter relay qualify for the finals (40.34) before tearing his Achilles tendon in the 200-meter prelims." That's it. It's easy to glide over that and not recognize the weight and the gravity that it carries. Of course it doesn't catch your eye ight away - that someone tore their Achilles. There are hundreds of thousands of people who tear their Achilles every year and the injury is most common in runners. But the former men's track and field sprinter won't be able to return. He wasn't even on the team in August before he began run- ning as a member of the team. And he was so close to accomplishing something he couldn't have imag- ined. Don't let me fool you into think- ing his story is that of any other walk-on. It doesn't end with unimaginable dreams being real- ized like so many other stories. It's more than that. Matt Campbell was fast com- ing out of Rochester High School, but he'll be the first to tell you he wasn't "that fast." Even though he was faster than many of his team- mates in high school, he was still just an above-average runner who won two regional championships in the 400-meter dash and was named an All-State selection in the 4x100-meter relay. Campbell didn't have the indi- vidual accolades of a state champi- onship, or school record in a sport where the individual accolades separate the best from the rest of the pack. But he knew that his time running wasn't up. There wereother,smallerNCAA Division III schools that offered him an opportunity to run, but they weren't what Campbell was look- ing for. So, like thousands of other students, he applied as a preferred walk-on, and entered the program that way. "I just went for it," he said. There was no scholarship for Campbell and certainly no acclaim when he entered school. He ran during the indoor season of his freshman year without turn- ing heads, filling in wherever he received a chance. He was red- shirted his outdoor season. Of course, that doesn't mean it slowed him in the slightest. "I justkept on looking at people I wanted to be faster than, or people I wanted to be like," Campbell said. "I kept on trying to be like them." Times dropped, top-10 finish- es piled up, the number of races increased and Campbell's impor- tance jumped in the span of a year. On a team that needed depth in its sprint squadron, Campbell's charm and never-ending work ethic made him a natural selection to fill relay teams or contested spots in open 'events. "You want to come to prac- tice every day when you see Matt Campbell," said former Michigan coach Fred LaPlante. "He's atten- tive, he's going to listen, he gets your message, he's not afraid to ask questions, he's going to support his teammates. All the things that you want." By the end of his junior year, still a redshirt sophomore in the outdoor season, Campbell had qualified for the NCAA Outdoor Championships as a member of the 4x100-meter relay. The team fin- ished with an All-American hon- orable mention, but no matter - it was already more than he was sup- posed to contribute. And he continued to contribute as a leader. Not as the vocal, in- your-face leader, but the one that told you the truth and then led by example. Against Ohio State, also known as "The Dual," you could see what made Campbell such a polar- izing leader. After winning the CSG From Page 1 Mays said while he did not dispute Proppe's executive powers to establish new commissions, he believed that convening available assembly members to discuss commission matters would have been appropriate given the history between the two parties. However, recent developments have proven the executive commis- sions to be open to Senate Assembly input. Through a new provision that allows studentsto pitch ideas for the creation of new commissions, Mays will be working with Proppe to establish a commission that would encourage more University interac- tion with the Detroit area. , Wednesday, the Executive Board opened up applications for Commission Chair positions. Hays said forUM would work with the board to nominate suitable candidates for the positions. "We're going to have an open, positive dialogue about this," Hays said. "That's what forUM's all about and that's what we've always wanted to do - have transparency in government." Moving forward, Proppe said meetings will need to be held to determine whether last year will be considered a valid year for the expired commissions. "We'll work to correct and move forward," Proppe said. "We can't change what happened (last year) but I'm really happy to work with the Commission chairs." COURTESY OF FACEBOOK 200-meter dash, Campbell jogged around the building to cool down like the other competitors. Yet Campbell wasn't cooling down, but warming up for his final race of the day - the 4x400-meter relay. As he battled fatigue, Campbell bolted out of the starting blocks with 30 minutes of rest. His legs chugging in short steps like the earlier race, and Campbell held on to second place, hoping to hit the second gear. But the second gear wasn't enough and Campbell fell behind. He continued to swing his arms, the grimace across his face failing to acknowledge defeat. The time to quit would have been well before the race started, when the Buck- eyes had wrapped up the meet, but there was Campbell, running on fumes. Exasperated, he stretched his arm to pass the baton, and cheered for the rest of the relay. His team- mates watched on. "If you work hard, it's just one less variable in how good you're going to be," LaPlante said. "There are a lot of great instances out there, and to point those out to the team - he's just a great example for people." 16 *** Michigan's 4x100-meter relay record was set in 1978, when Doug Hennigar, Charles CroutherArnett Chisholm and James Grace ran a 39.92. The next two fastest times were run in 40 seconds or slower. Matt Campbell and the 4x100- meter relay team were three-tenths of a second away from breaking that record. He led the 4x100-meter relay through the season, perfecting the exchange of the baton, the timing of his first step and the lunge at the end. Campbell and his team- mates - sophomore Codie Nolan, senior Aaron Taylor and junior Justin Clarke - had dropped time slowly and steadily along a path set to break the record as the season wound down. For many, the Big Ten Out- door Championships in Columbus would be the last chance to com- pete for the year. For Campbell and the 4x100-meter relay, it was a stepping stone before the NCAA preliminary meet and the NCAA Outdoor Championships. Two races before a shot at scoring points on the national stage and three total to break the school record. Pain is inevitable in track. Campbell wasn't surprised when he started feeling pain in his Achilles during the season. It became chronic, but nothing he hadn't felt before. He sat down in the starting blocks for the preliminary heat of the 200-meter dash at the Big Ten championships, in spite of the pain, after successfully qualifying in the 4x100-meter relay earlier. "I was confident it wasn't going to be a problem at Big Tens," Camp- bell said. "It hurt after the 4x100, but I was loosened it up and was ready to go." So he went on it. Out of the start- ing blocks he came, pushing off just as the gun sounded - just as years of experience had taught him. Around the turn he came, running near the front of the pack, his right arm swinging harder for balance with the short breathes. "Then, I feel someone kick me in the back of my foot," Campbell said. "I'm suddenly tumbling for- ward and I'm on the ground. I'm hitting the ground angry, asking, 'Who is the person that kicked meT' "Then I tried to get up." There was a tingling pain; something didn't feel right as the trainers rushed to the track. They picked him up and carried him off to the side. His teammates ran to the track to see. Confused and frustrated, Camp- bell waited until the trainer work- ing for the Buckeyes informed him hehadtornhisleft Achillestendon. His own trainer was too afraid to pass on the bad news to an.upset athlete. He was done for the year. His career had ended without being See CAMPBELL, Page 11 Survey shows organ recipients more likely to prefer givers with similar characteristics By ARIANA ASSAF Daily StaffReporter It's not every day that a Sher- lock Holmes story inspires an important psychological study. When University researchers began discussing "The Adven- ture of the Creeping Man," in which a youth-seeking professor starts acting like a monkey after using a drug derived from mon- keys, they became interested in the belief that inner bodily sub- stances can affect personality characteristics. Researchers from the Depart- ment of Psychology studied how people felt about receiving an organ donation from someone who is different from them in any way, and examined whether they believed receiving an organ could change a recipient's per- sonality traits to be more similar to that of a donor. Psychology Prof. Susan Gelman said her team were particularly 'interested in how responses from Indians and Americans might differ, because of the heightened cultural concerns surrounding contamination in India and the country's history with transplant operations. "There was a period of time where you could pay to get a transplant, and that led to ter- rible situations where somebody might give up an organ just for the money," Gelman said. She also said the team expect- ed India's rigid caste system to affect thoughts on transplants more so than in a country like the United States. However, there were more similarities than expected between respon- dents from both countries. Participants were asked -to rank the desirability of a given organ donor based on Character- istics such as gender, age, back- ground and sexual orientation. They were also asked if they were looking for characteristics they see in themselves - positive or negative - and were asked to state their beliefs concern- ing whether or not a transplant would cause a recipient's per- sonality or behavior to become more like that of their donor. Ultimately, the study found that people are not in favor of receiving an organ from a per- son who is different from them, or from someone who they per- ceive as having negative charac- teristics. The desire to.receive a donation from a similar person appeared to be the most wide- spread, but receiving a donation from a perceived "good" person was also an acceptable option. A blood transfusion scenario yielded similar results: the study showed that people much prefer to receive blood from someone who is similar to them. "This was interesting, and surprising," Meyer said. "Blood transfusions are pretty common, but people have this sort of discomfort about getting blood from someone different from them." The researchers noted that neither the gender nor country of origin of participants seemed to be differentiating factors. The same beliefs were found equally in men, women, Indians and Americans. Gelman said the question that yielded the strongest opinions were related to cross-species transplants. "Animaltransplantswere seen as particularly troublesome," she said. Though the transplant of a full animal organ into a human has never been done successfully and is still a heavily debated topic in the medical field, Gelman said receiving even part of an organ - like a heart valve from a pig - was generally looked down upon by participants. Rackham student Sarah Stilwell, who also co-authored the study, wrote in an e-mail interview that that there are upsides and downsides to xenotransplantation, or animal- to-human transplants. "There are a ,tremendous amount of individuals in need of transplants, but a widespread human organ shortage in clinical implantation," she wrote. "However, there is a very high risk of organ rejection due to the foreign animal tissue being rejected by the body's immune system, even with anti-rejection medication." With the final publication of this study, the team is moving on to examine these beliefs in children. "Children lack formal scien- tific knowledge that would be incompatible with intuitions about transplants," Meyer said. While participants were asked to provide demographic information, the study did not take into consideration medical past. Namely, it did not pointedly examine how beliefs change when a person is actually in need of a transplant or has received a transplant. Small samples of people who have had organ transplants have reported that these people experience "a nagging worry" that they will take on characteristics of their donor. Gelman said behavioral changes can result from having a major surgery more so than the actual organ. "We don't think there's any good evidence for it, but just because there's no evidence doesn't mean that it's not true."