Oct. 26, 2011
By Kristen Leigh Porter Jill Costello's personal journal outlined six rules to live by:
She died June 24, 2010, at age 22, less than a month after the Golden Bears finished second at the NCAA Championships. Costello, one of two winners of the NCAA Inspiration Award, will be recognized in January during the Honors Celebration at the 2012 NCAA Convention in Indianapolis. World War II veteran and former Southern California runner Louis Zamperini is the other honoree. "Jill was a great inspiration to me and many people because she taught us a simple lesson: you have your best life by making each day your best day, by living it fully and completely and finding the joy in each 24 hours," her mother, Mary Costello, said.
The NCAA Inspiration Award is presented to a current coach or administrator or to a current or former varsity student-athlete who, when confronted with a life-altering situation, used perseverance, dedication and determination to overcome the event and now serves as a role model to give hope and inspiration to others. Herb Benenson, assistant athletic director for athletic communications at Cal, nominated Jill, the 2010 Pac-10 Athlete of the Year, for the award. The life of the 5-4, 110-pound dynamo, who was named the 2010 Pac-10 Athlete of the Year for women's crew, was the subject of a number of regional and national attention. ESPN aired an in-depth feature on Costello's life this past summer, and Sports Illustrated published a piece on her last fall. Her life also was highlighted in NCAA Champion magazine. Costello's words to live by are forever etched in the memory of her boyfriend, Bryce Atkinson, a former member of the Cal men's crew. That final year, they put the cancer aside and lived life like two college kids in love. "We didn't worry about cancer and chemo ... That inspired me, now that she's gone, on how I need to live my life," Atkinson, 23, said. That also means carrying on Costello's mission to beat lung cancer - big time. Atkinson serves as director of marketing for the Jill's Legacy Advisory Board, affiliated with the California-based Bonnie J. Addario Lung Cancer Foundation that Costello became involved with following her diagnosis. When Jill's Legacy was officially launched in March 2011, BJALCF namesake Bonnie Addario said she was "inspired and extremely hopeful about the message that these incredible young people can send to the world about lung cancer." This year alone, $293,000 has been raised through grants and Jog for Jill events, which will fund hand-picked young lung cancer researchers and lung cancer awareness campaigns. The largest Jog for Jill was a 5K event held at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco on Sept. 12, 2010, that attracted approximately 3,000 people, including 400-500 Cal student-athletes. The event raised more than $319,000 for lung cancer research. The first out-of-state Jog for Jill event was held Sept. 25 on the Cornell University campus where more than 600 participants raised more than $45,000. Another Jog for Jill is scheduled for Nov. 13 on the Tulsa campus. Sorority sister and close friend Darby Anderson, a former Cal water polo player who became a full-time employee of BJALCF in January, said Costello was passionate about changing the stigma of lung cancer and finding a cure for the disease. Lung cancer is still the number one cancer killer with a 15.5 percent survival rate, Anderson said. People still associate it with smoking, despite the fact that now up to 80 percent of newly diagnosed lung cancer patients never smoked or stopped smoking decades before their diagnosis. "College students especially can really relate to her story because she was so young and very much a `normal' college girl before she was diagnosed," the 23-year-old Anderson said, noting support from the rowing teams at Penn, Harvard, Princeton, Stanford and Loyola Marymount. "This is why we have seen so much success at the college level with raising money and awareness for lung cancer." The Cal women's crew, which took third at the 2011 NCAA Championships, celebrated Costello this past season rather than mourning her. The dual with rival Stanford has been renamed "The Jill Row" and the team wears teal and navy tank tops with Costello's profile on the back instead of the Cal bear for the competition. At the Pac-10 Women's Challenge in March, Beat Lung Cancer was unveiled as the new varsity eight boat. "Jill would be honored to receive this award, and I know her family is touched by the recognition," coach Dave O'Neill said of the NCAA Inspiration Award. "Her strength and resolve was limitless, especially during the most difficult moments. Whether it was racing a tough Stanford crew or battling lung cancer, Jill always gave everything she had." Costello will receive the Service Award from the Cal Athletic Hall of Fame next month and be introduced with the Hall of Fame class at the home football game vs. Oregon State Nov. 12. Jill's Legacy also will be holding a fundraiser that weekend. For more information, visit JillsLegacy.org.
|
BRAND CENTRAL
MEN'S BASKETBALL
WOMEN'S BASKETBALL
FACILITY RENTALS
THE GOLD STANDARD
MyCalBears.com
ANNUAL REPORT
|
||||||||||||||||||