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TCU guard Hailey Van Lith has spoken candidly about her mental health journey this NCAA tournament and revealed after a second-round win over a Louisville team she once played for that she'd previously contemplated suicide.
On Monday, after her Horned Frogs were eliminated by Texas in the Elite Eight in her final college game, she opened up about how TCU coach Mark Campbell helped her reach a healthier place.
Van Lith is a decorated player who previously helped lead LSU and Louisville in runs to the Elite Eight and Final Four. She joined TCU this season for her fifth and final year in college and earned Big 12 Player of the Year and third-team All-America honors.
But she's taking much more from her time at TCU than her basketball success.
"It's hard for me to put into words, but my relationship with coach Mark has been a joy for me," Van Lith said. "I'm sure I gave him a lot of headaches throughout the year. He just accepted me for who I was. He took me at face value."
Van Lith then said that Campbell "took a risk" by bringing her into the TCU program and opened up about how Campbell helped her with her mental health.
"He thanks me for coming to the program," Van Lith continued. "But he took a risk on me. He met me with full belief. He had a vision of who I thought I could be. At the beginning, he probably was convincing me that I could be that person. I wasn't necessarily in a place where I knew who I was any more.
"He has just breathed life into me. And from a life perspective, he's taught me a lot of great lessons about how to have healthy relationships and what it takes to have a healthy relationship, and how much better life can be if you just let people see who you are. And that's hard for me.
"And so for me to feel comfortable and safe doing that with him, that took a lot of work on his part that he did not have to do. He could have told me to screw off when I was giving him problems. I'm forever grateful for him, and God put him in my life to transform it. And he certainly has done that."