Brad Kerfoot
Brad Kerfoot
  • Induction Year:
    2006
  • OCAA Induction:
    2015
  • CCAA Induction:
    2023
  • Years Played:
    2001-04
  • Sport:
    Golf
  • Category:
    Athlete

Bio

Brad Kerfoot was one of the most influential golfers in the early years of Humber's decade of dominance provincially and nationally and a significant player on the team that won the 2004 RCGA university/college national golf championship.

Beginning in 2001, Kerfoot was a part of three OCAA provincial and three CCAA national men's team championships, with his scores contributing to each title.

2003 was a magical season for Kerfoot, who captured both an OCAA and CCAA individual silver medal. The following spring, Kerfoot completed the triple crown, leading the Hawks to the program's first RCGA university/college championship. He opened the tournament by firing a two-under-par 69, eventually winning the individual title by eight strokes, while his team won the title by a combined 22 strokes. His brilliant performance saw him named the captain of the Team Canada squad at the 2004 FISU Golf Championship in Korat, Thailand.

After his dominant 2003-04 campaign, Kerfoot became the first golfer to be named the Humber male athlete of the year.

In 2015, Kerfoot was inducted into the OCAA Hall of Fame. He was later enshrined into the CCAA Hall of Fame in the second class of Humber inductees.

Medals
  • 2004 RCGA Champion
  • 2004 RCGA Individual Champion
  • 3x CCAA National Champion (2001, 2002, 2003)
  • 2003 CCAA Individual Silver Medal 
  • 3x OCAA Provincial Champion (2001, 2002, 2003)
  • 2003 OCAA Individual Silver Medal
Accolades
  • 2x CCAA All-Canadian (2002, 2003)
  • 2004 FISU Canada Team Captain
  • 2015 OCAA Hall of Famer
  • 2006 Humber Hall of Famer
  • 2004 Humber Male Athlete of the Year
  • Humber Athletics Honoured Jersey
  • Humber Athletics Top-50 Athletes
Career Low Rounds
  • RCGA Championship: -2 (69), Wyldewood GC, 2003
  • CCAA Championship: -2 (70), Hawkridge GC, 2003
  • OCAA Championship: +2 (74), Upper Canada, 2003