I MET with the members of the Ateneo Golf Team the other week at the Moro Lorenzo Sports Center inside the Ateneo de Manila University campus. At that time, they booked a place in the finals of the Inter-Collegiate Golf Tournament against powerhouse Lyceum of the Philippines Cavite.
Behind the nervous smiles of an underdog squad there was hope and optimism. “We have to be at our very best if we even want a chance to beat the top college golf teams,” Team Manager Adrian Romero said.
There’s a story to Romero’s statement.
For years, more than a decade it seems, the Ateneo college golf team seemed to go through the motions. Although sanctioned by the school, the teams, according to current team captain Raphael Diaz, just played for the heck of it.
“Before, it was a relaxed atmosphere,” Diaz related. “Kung gusto mo pumalo ngayon, sige. If you can make it to training, cool. If not, no biggie.”
Nikki Bruce added, “When our schoolmates learned we were in the golf team, they’d say, ‘o, meron pala tayong team.’ They didn’t know maybe didn’t care. But how can they when the teams weren’t winning?”
However, the winds of change are blowing Ateneo’s way.
In 2015 the team made the finals of the Inter-Collegiate Golf Tournament for the first time since those early years of the new millennium.
“We wanted to be more dedicated, stricter in our approach and training,” threw in Bruce who was a freshman in 2015. “We didn’t just come here to get blown off and not have a care. We care and losing wasn’t fun.”
“Bakit kami team?” Romero wondered. “Kasi marami kaming naglalaro rito sa Ateneo, and to represent the sport and the school, we decided to get serious about competing.”
With some help coming from the Ateneo Golf Foundation, as well as from alumni like Lovell Gopez of Mizuno (who is also from Ateneo), and the recruitment of talented players, the attitude toward golf has greatly changed.
“We’re trying to replicate that 2015 finish or even better it,” Diaz succinctly put.
“We are also taking note of the players who aren’t getting scholarships abroad so we can recruit them”, Nikki added.
One of the Ateneo team’s new members is Marc Salandanan. If his name sounds familiar, it is because he won a University Athletic Association of the Philippines (UAAP) Juniors basketball crown in Season 77, alongside Matt and Mike Nieto, Jolo Mendoza, and Gian Mamuyac. He currently plays on Team B but seems to have found his calling in golf. “I’d still love to make it to Team A and play in the UAAP, but I love what I am doing now.”
Salandanan has incidentally be named as next year’s Ateneo golf team captain. It is an honor he is proud of. “I hope I am worthy of it and can lead the team and school to glory. Unlike in basketball where you just get your shots up, in golf no matter how many times you play a course, you can always screw things up. In the golf course, the weather conditions also matter so it takes intense concentration.”
“I think we can achieve things because we love the sport,” Andie Dy Buncio added. “Our passion gets us going. We also try to help out one another through study groups and in the game. Plus, we get a lot of support from our parents.”
“Right now, it comes down to dedication and time management,” Diaz bared. “There’s the school work where there is no let up and there’s training. We can’t get away from school work and just can’t cut. But even in our team, we have a cut system. We have training on Monday to Saturday at Camp Aguinaldo but only allow three cuts.”
And the paradigm shift has worked. Although right now, the Ateneo Golf team is in the Inter-Collegiate Golf Tournament finals against heavily-favored Lyceum. They are down 0-2 with Lyceum needing to win one more match to secure the title. If Ateneo wins the two matches they will forge a playoff.
“Right now, everything is a learning experience,” Bruce summed up. “If we can get this, wow. But don’t think we’re fine na we’ll just try to give LPU a fight. We want to win this. And this is what it is all about—developing a winning mentality.”