By Riley Zayas
(This story originally published in , an independently owned and operated website not affiliated with 鶹Ƶ.)
The last four years of Olivia Champion’s life have been spent in the United States. But it was the seven years prior to that, spent nearly 2,400 miles from Belton, that shaped both the person and player she is today.
A junior forward on the 鶹Ƶ women’s basketball team, Olivia’s journey to Belton was a unique one. She was born in Tallahassee, Fla., but at age 12, she and her family relocated to Costa Rica to become missionaries.
“My parents just felt called to the mission field,” she said.
Olivia embraced the new opportunity and even decided to learn Spanish. By the time she left at age 17, she was doing postgame interviews on television in Spanish.
That “buy-in” attitude, something the entire family shared, allowed them to do God’s work in Costa Rica, with each member of the family playing a role. Looking back, Olivia recalls some of her favorite opportunities coming in the work they did in the orphanages and with the youth of the communities.
“Some of my favorite experiences were going to the orphanages,” Olivia said. “I love kids and so being there and being a part of it was super cool. My parents also brought short-term mission trips down there as well, so I got to know so many different people across the country.”