Lisa CampbellÃÂ ( Bryant, born 1 May 1968) is a former Australian badminton player and is currently (2026) a sports announcer/commentator. Born in Frankston, Victoria, she competed internationally for Australia from the mid-1980s until her retirement in the late 1990s. She competed as Lisa Bryant prior to her marriage in 1993. Campbell represented Australia in many Uber Cup competitions, World Championships, the 1990 and 1994 Commonwealth Games, and the 1996 Olympic Games. She later became a sports presenter and announcer.
Bryant was born in Frankston, Victoria, the daughter of Graham Bryant and Faye (nee Fox). She attended ArmataàPrimary School in Frankston North and later Monterey Secondary College (1980âÂÂ1984).
She began playing badminton as a twelve-year-old and also participated in athletics during her early teens.
By the mid-1980s, Campbell was competing in junior and open badminton tournaments in Australia. She later represented Australia in international events, including the Uber Cup and World Championships.
Selectors cited her achievements in a number of significant competitions in naming her for the 1990 XIVth Commonwealth Games held in Auckland, New Zealand. Bryant (Campbell) was runner-up in the International Ladies Doubles in the 1988 Silver Bowl. She was a member of the 1989 World Championship team and the 1989 Whyte Trophy team. Campbell also reached the third round of the 1989 World Individual Championships. In the Australian Badminton Championships Campbell won the women's singles, women's doubles, and mixed doubles.
Commentators consider Campbell's greatest achievement to be when she won the first medal ever for Australia, the Gold Medal, at the 1994 Commonwealth Games in Victoria, Canada, in the women's singles event. She defeated Rhona Robertson of New Zealand in the semi-final and, on 28 August 1994, Si-an Deng of Canada in the final. Her achievement was considered exceptional, as she was an unseeded player, achieved victory from impending defeat in both the semi-final and the final, and needed painkillers to finish both matches. Sports commentator and poet Rupert McCall dedicated six stanzas of his 19-stanza poem, "The Great Goldrush", to Campbell's victory. The poem commemorates Australia's then-unprecedented haul of 87 gold medals at the 1994 Commonwealth Games in Victoria, British Columbia. McCall highlighted her status as an unseeded competitor:
Campbell represented Australia at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta, competing in women's singles and mixed doubles.
After retiring from competition, Campbell worked as a sports announcer at major sporting events, including the 2006, 2010 and 2018 Commonwealth Games and the 2024 Paris Olympics and Paralympics.