A Quiet Beginning, A Loud Impact
Daniel Steele’s story doesn’t begin on a tee box. It begins in quiet.
Born in Puerto Rico and raised in Orlando, Daniel grew up with autism and spent much of his early childhood nonverbal. For years, communication came in small gestures, not full sentences. Sports were never part of his world. His family never imagined they would be.
That changed in July 2020, during the early months of the pandemic. Out of nowhere, Daniel told his father, Jim: “I want to play golf.”
It caught everyone off guard. Golf had never been on Daniel’s radar. But something had shifted.
Jim had recently picked up the game again after recovering from surgery. He figured maybe they could do this together. So he tried giving Daniel lessons himself. But teaching a teenager with autism, especially one who had only recently found his voice, needed more than backyard lessons.
Then came Tony.
Tony Keeton, Director of Instruction at Orange County National, had a daughter on the spectrum. He understood how to meet Daniel where he was. What started as a one-off lesson turned into a standing Monday morning ritual. Every week, without fail. Tony became a coach, mentor, and a friend.
Golf Gave Daniel a Language
The driving range became Daniel’s second home. Repetition. Rhythm. A routine.
For someone whose world could feel chaotic or overwhelming, golf created order. He began hitting 400–500 balls a week. Practicing five or six days. And over time, something shifted in his posture, his speech, his confidence.
Daniel still can’t tie his own shoes. But he can memorize swing mechanics, navigate a scorecard, and compete under pressure. Golf gave him a voice that didn't rely on words. It gave him presence.
“Golf forces Daniel to push through things that used to shut him down,” Jim says. “It’s made him stronger, not just physically, but emotionally.”
That Birdie Meant Everything
In July 2021, just after Daniel’s great-grandmother passed away, he stood over a putt during a round. He took his time. Swung. Sank it.
As the ball dropped, he pointed to the sky.
Jim had the camera rolling. That video now has over 1.5 million views. It became Daniel’s signature: a gesture of connection, of love, of awareness. They had the moment turned into a logo.
The moment wasn’t planned or staged. A simple birdie, played in silence, echoed across the internet.
Doors Open, Routines Stay
A year after picking up the game, Daniel competed in his first Special Olympics golf event. He won his division. Then he won again. And again. County titles. Area titles. A gold medal at the Florida State Championships. A silver at the 2022 USA Games in Orlando.
He didn’t stop there.
Daniel joined the Special Olympics Leadership Committee. Became a Global Messenger. He’s now preparing to represent Florida at the 2026 USA Games in Minneapolis/St. Paul.
He also works at Publix as a front attendant. For three years, he’s balanced early mornings on the golf course with afternoons bagging groceries. That structure of golf, work, community grounds him.
His achievements have caught the eye of national networks. FOX. CBS. NBC. Spectrum. They’ve all featured his story. And in 2024, Daniel was invited to join the Doug Flutie Jr. Foundation’s “Stars on the Spectrum” Golf Tour. In his very first event, he placed second.
This Year Changed Everything
In just the first five months of 2025, Daniel has had the kind of year most golfers only dream about.
He was selected to represent the Special Olympics at the Arnold Palmer Invitational, where he hit balls on the range with Wyndham Clark. The entire moment was filmed by NBC, shared by the PGA Tour, and broadcast nationwide on the Golf Channel. Wyndham later invited him to TGL in Palm Beach Gardens, where Daniel met even more of his golf heroes.
He’s spent time with Ernie Els at an Els for Autism event. Played alongside Doug Flutie. Teed off in Coral Springs with NFL legend Lawrence Taylor.
His Instagram has climbed past 110,000 followers, because people are drawn to his joy, his focus, and his love for the game.
A Family Rebuilt on Fairways
Jim still gets emotional talking about what golf has done for their family.
“It gave me my son,” he says. “And it gave me a best friend.”
They travel the country together—Jim on the bag, Daniel with the club. They laugh, strategize, and soak in the moments. Golf gave Daniel a future and Jim a front-row seat to something extraordinary.
Daniel’s mother is writing a book about the journey. A nonprofit is in the works to help other golfers with autism get the resources they need. And Daniel? He just wants to keep getting better, one shot at a time.
What Golf Can Do
Daniel Steele didn’t grow up in a country club. He didn’t have a swing coach at age five or a shelf full of junior trophies. He started with silence. And found something worth fighting for.
Golf gave Daniel a path forward. A reason to show up. A platform to inspire.
When asked what advice he’d give to others who want to learn golf, Daniel keeps it simple:
“Stay focused. Keep trying. And remember… you can do anything.”
From All of Us at SQAIRZ
We couldn’t be more proud to support Daniel on his journey. To watch him grow, compete, and inspire others on and off the course.
Daniel wears SQAIRZ not because he has to, but because he believes in the mission. And we believe in him.