Fraser Valley – Women’s Golf: Cascades stage thrilling rally to win silver medal at Nationals
đď¸âłď¸ | What a day for Cascades WGOLF!
— UFV Cascades (@UFVCascades) June 5, 2022
The squad staged a thrilling back-nine rally to edge @UBCOHeat for silver at #CDNUniCollege Championship in Bromont, Que.! đĽ
That's the best-ever finish for @goUFV WGOLF at this championship!
đ https://t.co/JnW1V1j46U#WeClimbWeConquer pic.twitter.com/Wbg1GhXSiy
The University of the Fraser Valley womenâs golf team established a new high-water mark for the program at the Canadian University/College Championship, rallying on the back nine on Saturday to secure the silver medal in the team event.
The Cascades began Saturdayâs fourth and final round at Domaine Château Bromont in Bromont, Que. sitting third in the team standings, trailing the UBC Okanagan Heat by a single stroke. They stumbled on the front nine â which was interrupted due to inclement weather â and found themselves trailing by seven at the turn.
But an outstanding back-nine performance saw the Cascades roar back to edge the Heat by three and claim the silver. UFVâs four-round team score was +93, UBCO was at +96, and the Montreal Carabins (+105), Western Mustangs (+106) and Victoria Vikes (+111) finished fourth through sixth, respectively. The UBC Thunderbirds (-5) ran away with the team gold medal.
The result marked the Cascadesâ best-ever finish at the Golf Canada event â UFVâs previous best was a bronze, won in 2018 as the host squad at Chilliwack Golf Club.
âIncredible, absolutely incredible,â Cascades head coach Cody Stewart said. âIt was a bit of a roller-coaster, but we knew it would come down to the last few holes â and it sure did.
âThis is the most proud Iâve ever been as a coach. I feel fortunate to work with the group that we have. The culture, the chemistry, how they rallied for each other. Our athletes donât care about the individual glory â they want whatâs best for the team. The vibe on the team is so contagious.
âIâve been telling them all year that theyâre one of the top teams in the country. Whether or not they believed me â itâs a young, young group â they did it.â
Lucy Park, in solo eighth place (+26 for the week), was the Cascadesâ top individual finisher. Emery Bardock (+30) tied for 11th, and Coral Hamade (+55) was 21st. Alex Brunner did not register an individual finish, as a wrist injury sidelined her for Fridayâs third round, but she managed to post a scoring round for the UFV squad on each of the three days she was able to complete.
âSheâs the MVP,â Stewart asserted. âIf Alex didnât persevere through a ton of pain, we might have been fighting for the cut line, honestly. She gave it her absolute all, and what she did for those three days blew my mind.
âI was hoping there was a chance she could play on Day 4. I thought weâd drained her batteries on Days 1 and 2, but somehow â I donât know how â she did it today.â
Park led the Cascadesâ back-nine rally, putting together seven pars and two birdies on her way to her lowest round of the week, a three-over 75.
âTo go out and shoot a two-under back nine under crazy conditions was an effort worthy of a fifth-year player,â Stewart said of Park, who â like Brunner and Hamade â is still in her first season of eligibility. âThe definition of clutch was her back nine. That put us over the top, for sure.â
Bardock, the lone upperclass athlete on the Cascadesâ roster, was part of the bronze medal-winning team back in 2018. She contributed to the comeback by stringing together six straight pars to close out her round, highlighted by an incredible shot into the green on 17 that had the crowd roaring.
âCollectively, we were all rooting for each other and we all really wanted it,â Bardock said. âI think thatâs what really pushed us to the finish today.
âA few of the rookies felt a bit of pressure because theyâd never been in this situation before, but I think all of us would agree this was one of the most fun rounds of golf weâve ever played, because we were chasing (UBCO).
âIâm very, very proud of all of them â Lucy, Coral and Alex all worked so hard this week. For me, this is something thatâs super-exciting â weâve never won a silver medal before, and Iâm so proud to be a part of that.â
Men’s Golf: Armstrong wins individual silver medal at Nationals
đď¸âłď¸ | An outstanding final round at the #CDNUniCollege Championship yielded the individual silver medal for the Cascades' Jacob Armstrong! đĽ
— UFV Cascades (@UFVCascades) June 5, 2022
The Winnipeg product paced @goUFV MGOLF to a fourth-place finish in the team event.
đ https://t.co/r5pXf35npz#WeClimbWeConquer pic.twitter.com/j0IpaiNe9k
Jacob Armstrong of the University of the Fraser Valley menâs golf team capped an outstanding spring season by tying for second at the Canadian University/College Championship in Bromont, Que.
The Winnipeg product, in his second year of eligibility and third overall at UFV, was steady as a metronome throughout the national championship, carding rounds of 69, 72, 69 and 69 at Domaine Château Bromont. That left him two strokes back of individual champ Aidan Schumer of the UBC Thunderbirds (-11), and in a three-way tie for second at -9 alongside Samuel Breton Gagnon of the Champlain St. Lawrence Lions and Alexis Leray of the Laval Rouge et Or.
Armstrongâs silver medal marks the second-best individual finish for a Cascades menâs golfer at the Golf Canada event, exceeded only by Daniel Campbellâs dominant gold-medal performance in 2018.
âIt might have been the most impressive thing Iâve seen since I started coaching,â UFV head coach Aaron Pauls said, reflecting on Armstrongâs performance over four rounds this week. âJacob was incredibly nervous, especially the last couple days when he knew he was in the mix. But his final round today was just remarkable. He works his butt off, and it was awesome to see him play so well on that stage.â
Pauls sensed Armstrongâs nerves from the way he was moving â âwalking 1000 miles an hour, really antsyâ. Yet his six-birdie, three-bogey round of 69 on Saturday â amidst weather so challenging it delayed play for a stretch â was the low round of the day and one of just three rounds under par.
âIâve never been so out of breath from nerves my entire life,â Armstrong acknowledged with a chuckle afterward. âIt was literally for four days in a row . . . It was actually absurd.
âPart of it was just fighting for the team. These guys, I care a lot about them, and Iâve been waiting to play a national championship for three years now.â
Indeed, after the Golf Canada event was cancelled due to COVID in 2020 and 2021, Armstrong made the most of his first crack at it, and has now put himself in position to be considered for a spot on Team Canada for the FISU World University Golf Championships, which run July 20-23 in Torino, Italy.
âItâs unreal â Iâm still processing things, it hasnât really hit yet,â Armstrong said, reflecting on sharing the silver medal.
âItâs a course that I think suited me. I just played my game and just trusted myself, and it worked out.â
Armstrongâs stellar showing led the Cascades to the brink of the podium in the team event. The UFV squad came into Saturday in fourth place, trailing the Victoria Vikes by nine strokes for the last podium spot. A red-hot start had the Cascades at -5 at the turn â easily the low team score of the day to that point â but they struggled over their last nine holes as a group, finishing at +9 for the day to fall just shy of a team medal. The Cascades finished at +18 for the week, trailing UBC (-7), Laval (+1) and UVic (+8).
Jackson Jacob (+1 for the week) finished solo eighth to give UFV two of the top 10 individual finishers. Eli Greene (+7) tied for 17th, Hudson LaFayette (+19) was T-36th, and Ben Whiton (+28) was 45th.
âWe had the start that we needed today,â Pauls noted, âbut we had a few hiccups on the back. We had a thunderstorm and it got super windy out here, which caused problems for some of us. But thatâs the way these things go sometimes. You need to find a bit of lightning in a bottle, and it didnât happen on the back nine for us.
âObviously you want to win a medal, but fourth is still a very good result, especially considering the first two days we didnât have great performances as a team. To fight back and get into the mix was a very good thing. Unfortunately we werenât able to catch Laval or UVic, but I think our guys learned a lot about themselves and about golf this week, which is really positive.â







