A former hockey player turned golf player, whoBԪַs described as a BԪַreal-life Happy Gilmore,BԪַ is gearing up to help defend the UVic Vikes golf teamBԪַs title at the CAC MenBԪַs Golf Championship.
On April 29 to 30, reigning champions Aiden Craig-Steele and the Vikes golf team will be playing at Paragould Country Club in Arkansas.
Steele, a long-time hockey player, didnBԪַt start playing golf until his grade 11 year of high school while working at a golf course in Fort St. John.
As he prepared to attend the University of Victoria, he expressed his desire to compete in golf, and he spent his summer working on his game in hopes of cracking the menBԪַs roster.
After a qualifying game, which he came in second, he approached the Vikes head coach seeking guidance on how to get a spot on the team.
BԪַ[Head coach Justin Clews] set me up with a junior membership at Uplands [Golf Club] and laid out what I would need to do to make the team. From there, I just played a ton and focused on improving my game. IBԪַm naturally pretty athletic, but I knew nothing about the technical aspects of the sport,BԪַ he said in a new release.
After delays due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Craig-Steele played in a B.C. amateur tournament, where he beat most of the current Vikes, but when he got his opportunity to earn a spot on the Vikes roster through a play-in tournament, he fell short.
BԪַThe mental part of the game is everything and itBԪַs something IBԪַve really had to work on. IBԪַve always struggled with confidence. One minute youBԪַre full of adrenaline and the next minute youBԪַre wondering why you even do this,BԪַ he noted in the release.
By the spring season, he improved and done everything Clews had asked of him and he asked for another shot, which he got.
According to the Vikes, teammates like to say he BԪַathletes his way around the courseBԪַ, and Craig-Steele concurs with that assessment. Until this semester, in his final year as a Vike, he held the club with a baseball bat grip.
BԪַIBԪַve learned so much over the past few years, but I still rely on my athletic ability. I plateaued last year and had to change some parts of my game, including my grip. It was like taking five steps back to take six steps forward,BԪַ he said in the release.
He helped the menBԪַs golf team win the Continental Athletics Conference in 2022 and 2023 and the Canadian National Golf Championship in 2023. He also helped lead the program to its highest-ever finish at the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics MenBԪַs Golf Championship in 2023.
As he prepares for his last three tournaments in a Vikes uniform, he hopes to finally see himself on the podium.
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