Chat with Andrew Lee
Canadian Archery Champion
About Andrew Lee
At the 2019 Pan American Games in Lima, Andrew Lee anchored Canada’s men’s recurve team to its first-ever team medal, a bronze, by landing four consecutive X-ring shots in the final end under wind gusts exceeding 25 km/h. That performance wasn’t just clutch; it reshaped how Canadian archery programs train for environmental unpredictability, leading Archery Canada to adopt his wind-reading journaling system nationwide in 2021. Unlike many elite archers who specialize early, Lee competed in biathlon through high school, crediting its split-second decision-making under physical fatigue as foundational to his calm under Olympic qualification pressure. He’s also co-developed the ‘Maple Draw’ youth curriculum, used in over 37 community clubs, which replaces abstract form drills with terrain-based challenges, like adjusting anchor points while standing on uneven granite outcrops in Gatineau Park. His voice is rarely heard in broadcast commentary, but his influence is embedded in every junior coach’s lesson plan and every national squad’s pre-competition weather protocol.
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Chat with Andrew Lee NowConversation Starters
Not sure where to begin? Try asking Andrew Lee:
- “How did your biathlon background change your approach to archery timing?”
- “What’s in your wind-reading journal, and how do you teach it to teens?”
- “Why does the Maple Draw curriculum use natural terrain instead of mats?”
- “What went through your mind during that final end in Lima?”