At that point, still early in elementary school, Cali tried just about every event. But the high jump always caught her eye, less because of any dreams of winning medals than because jumping onto a big soft mat where you could do flips and play around looked quite fun. She never quite got the hang of triple jump. She took easily to long jump — she still competes in that event as a secondary focus, just as Claire competed in high jump as a secondary focus at Florida. But as soon as she was as tall as the high jump mat (it’s hard to jump over the bar before you can clear the mat), she had found her medium.
At Houston’s Memorial High School, she was a three-time Nike All-American in high jump and the Texas state runner-up as a senior. She earned a top-five finish in the 2024 USATF U20 Championships and second-place finish in that year’s USATF Junior Olympics.
While the significant age difference meant Cali and Claire were never in direct competition and rarely even in the same meets, there was always at least a sense of being “Claire’s sister” floating in the ether. Some of that was good. Practicing alongside Claire and Cate was fun, and she loves being part of what she dubs “Team Bryant” — all of them home for the holidays over the recent break, they trained together. Occasionally, the name was tedious, few other high schoolers measured against an NCAA All-American. Flipping the script, mastering the event that Claire only dabbled in, granted her a realm of her own.
“I do feel like whenever we were younger people would pit us against each other,” Claire said. “It was something we had to actively push against to be able to root for each other instead of being in competition. I think Cali finding her home in high jump helped as well. She was jumping great — I really enjoyed high jump, but it was definitely my secondary event. It just didn’t come as naturally as long jump. It was so fun to cheer her on in high school and even when she was younger.”
Cali played team sports, too, when she was young. And the team dynamic in track and field, at its greatest in college, appeals to her. But the individualism inherent in high jump is its greatest appeal. Each jump is a puzzle, so many movements dependent on each other. You can’t just sprint at the bar and launch yourself into the air. From the first step of the graceful, bounding run-up to landing on the mat, it is like a symphony, where even one discordant note from the oboe ruins the whole thing.
In the high jump, you have to know yourself.
“It can be a very frustrating event,” Bryant said. “A lot of times I understand exactly what I’m supposed to be doing — like I need to be pushing my hips at exactly this time and flipping my feet over. But you can understand so much about the high jump and your body still doesn’t do it correctly because each step is so specific. It took me a long time to figure out my body, and every single thing takes so much body control. Just figuring out a certain move sometimes takes a year, which is so frustrating. And even if you figure it out, you can still mess it up.”

Writing Her Own Story
When it came time to choose a university, experience with the recruiting process and established contacts across the country were additional benefits of the family ties. Cali and her family already knew the coaches who had watched Claire and now expressed interest in the next Bryant — including Thomas, who had recruited eventual world champion Matthew Boling, Claire’s club teammate, at Georgia and remained friendly with the Bryants after taking the reins in Nashville. But the future ultimately mattered more than history. Familiarity helped get a foot in the recruiting door, but Vanderbilt won out because it was unlike so much else that she encountered. A charter member of the SEC that is equally proud of being one of one, it felt like a rather perfect fit for someone going her own way.
“It really just hit every single box for me when some schools weren’t hitting all of those,” Bryant said. “I wouldn’t have had a problem not being in the SEC, but I liked that Vanderbilt was. It’s a great education, a cool location and I really liked the team. That was a big deal. I love the Vanderbilt team. The girls are so sweet. And Coach A.T. is a great head coach. She knows what she’s doing.”
That independent streak separates learning from those who came before you from merely following in their footsteps. Bryant has always been good at forging her own path.
After winning the world championship last year, Claire talked about the importance of being herself. As successful as she had always been, it took years of hard-learned lessons to stop trying to do what other elite long jumpers did — and find instead what worked for her.
Right: Claire Bryant competes during ATHLOS NYC25 (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images for Athlos)
Cali has always been good at going her own way. She was never hesitant to speak up, no matter the issue. If the bar looked slightly askew, as it often did at small meets where staff and equipment are in short supply, she said something. She waited until it was fixed.
Many wouldn’t at that age, Claire included, unwilling to stand out.
“I feel like it’s easy when you see people around you who are successful to think you need to do exactly what they do,” Claire said. “Sometimes that may be the case, but a lot times that person is being 100 percent them and doing 100 percent of what they need to do to be great. So if you’re 100 percent you, it’s better than being 50 percent of your teammate or whoever you look up to. And one thing that Cali’s really good at is she really doesn’t care what other people think.
“Cali asserted herself a lot earlier than I did. That quality is really valuable in life, even outside of track.”
Scroll through Bryant’s photo roll from her first semester of college and you’ll find plenty of shots where she’s dressed to the nines for football Saturdays at FirstBank Stadium or seeking moments of levity with teammates enduring the preseason grind. There will also be sushi photos, as only dinner at Sushi 88 can provide.
Bryant is a September baby, which presents a challenge when you’re away from home and all that is familiar for the first time. At least, it would be a challenge for some. For Bryant, it was an opportunity. When she met new people on campus, beyond exchanging contact info or hometowns, she invited them to her birthday dinner. Looking back, she barely knew the names of some of the people in the photos at the time. By the end of the semester, most of them felt like old friends.
Life is more fun when you go through it comfortable with who you are.
And few things strip away pretense like that simple fiberglass rod suspended between two aluminum posts. It doesn’t play favorites. It stays or it falls. It’s entirely up to you. And only you.
So, yes, the high jump is Bryant’s story. One she was born to write.
“Some people may disagree with this, but I feel that it’s pretty clear in track whether or not something is meant for you,” Bryant said. “There are so many different events and something is meant for you. You can tell if someone is better at sprinting or long distance very quickly. And it’s the same thing with jumps. I knew I had found what was meant for me.”