The rehab went well, and the antibiotics were effective. Everything was going according to plan, and the timeline for recovery exceeded expectations. By October he was back on the ice with his team and feeling good until his hip started to feel off a few months later. Somehow, the osteomyelitis had made its way back, this time in his hip.
"It was the same thing; I got to a point where I had no energy, really sore muscles and was)really tight," Steinburg said. "I went to the hospital and just went through the same process again with my hip."
Taking the rest of the year off to fully recover, he focused heavily on rehab and his overall health. Summer training quickly became a focus following another six weeks of an antibiotic PICC line, two more weeks of oral antibiotics and hip rehab.
Post-recovery, Stienburg played his major-midget year with Halifax McDonald's in Nova Scotia while going through the prep school recruiting process. Still recovering, he decided playing in prep school and eventually going the NCAA route would be the best fit for him. He ended up choosing St. Andrew's College--an all-boys school in Aurora, Ontario, with more than 600 students.
The 6-foot-1, 185-pound forward played the past two seasons at St. Andrew's and has excelled in both the classroom and on the ice. After recording 62 points (29 goals and 33 assists) in 45 games in 2017-18, Stienburg registered 66 points (31 goals, 35 assists) in 48 contests as the team captain in 2018-19.
"[St. Andrew's] has been awesome, I've said it a hundred times I think," Stienburg said. "Going there is probably the best decision I have ever made. Everybody there from the hockey program, to the parents who I would stay with on the weekend, to my friends and the teachers. Everybody was really caring and put my best interest first."
Stienburg was more aware and open to the NCAA route than some of his peers, and his time at St. Andrew's reaffirmed that opinion. He wanted more time to develop and the injuries evidently played a huge role. However, growing up in Canada inspires dreams of playing at a high level for junior teams, including those based in your hometown.
For Stienburg, his local club was Halifax Mooseheads, the same squad that Nathan MacKinnon played for before being selected No. 1 overall in the 2013 NHL Draft.