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Olivia Dunne immediately burst into tears when she and her LSU gymnastics teammates found out they had secured the program's first national championship.
Up against stiff competition from No 3-5 national seeds California, Utah, and Florida, the Dunne and the rest of the No 2-ranked Tigers knew the margins to be crowned champions were razor thin.
To make Dunne even more jittery on the sidelines was LSU finishing the meet on balance beam, a notoriously hard discipline to maintain or increase a lead.
After LSU head coach Jay Clark confirmed Aleah Finnegan's 9.950 in the team's final routine of the season was enough to claim a title, the relief was obvious from Dunne, who could not stop the waterworks.
Dunne was far from the only LSU gymnast overcome with emotion. Although she did not compete in the national-championship meet, the social-media sensation had been a valued member of the Tigers' squad all season long.
Dunne celebrates with the national-championship trophy after LSU's victory on Saturday
As soon as Clark informed his team of its triumph, Dunne burst into tears alongside her team
Aleah Finnegan scored a 9.95 on beam to seal victory for LSU at Dickies Arena in Fort Worth
The tears were eventually replaced with elation as she got plenty of pictures holding up and kissing the national-championship trophy.
The Tigers claimed the title with a 198.225 score, beating California (197.850), Utah (197.800) and Florida (197.4375).
No 1 overall seed Oklahoma was eliminated in the national semifinals after starting Thursday's meet with the Sooners' lowest score on vault since January 2008.
Dunne took to Instagram as the team celebrated and hailed it the 'best day ever'.
The final was likely to be the last college gymnastics meet for Dunne, who has over 13million followers on TikTok and Instagram alone.
LSU, which finished fourth last year, trailed Utah by 0.037 points and led third-place California by 0.113 after three rotations but senior Sierra Ballard kicked off the fourth and final rotation on beam with a career-high 9.950 - her only routine of the day.
Dunne took to Instagram as the team celebrated and hailed it the 'best day ever'
Dunne's mirror selfie before what was likely her final college gymnastics meet on Saturday
It remains to be seen where Dunne goes from here, now her college gymnastics career looks likely to be over.
She has an annual NIL value of $3.7million, per On3, the highest of any gymnast and No 3 in college sports.
Dunne's post-LSU possibilities are endless, with her brand deals opening up to bigger partnerships.
Although there is no professional gymnastics league, Dunne's star power is undeniable. She could see a similar profit as Caitlin Clark.
Clark had an NIL with Nike while at Iowa, and recently signed a reported eight-figure partnership with the company.