Jake Cammarata and Andrew Carey from The College of Wooster men's golf team and Will Fink, Bill Holtzer, Lane Kellogg, and Riley Schulze from the men's lacrosse team were named College Sports Communicators' Academic All-District®, as announced by the organization on Tuesday.
Cammarata, a sophomore, ranked sixth on the team with a 78.5 average over 20 rounds, which were tied for second on the team. Cammarata had the Fighting Scots' fourth-best score of 77 in the final round of the North Coast Athletic Conference Championship. He placed 36th with a 243. Cammarata's season opened with a 1-under-par 71 at the Gatorade Collegiate, where he placed 10th at 148. He had four rounds of 75 or better on the year, including a 73 on the opening day of John Carroll University's Dan Caschera and John DiCillo Classic.
Cammarata is a physics major and is enrolled in the pre-engineering program. On campus, Cammarata is an athletic communication video intern and creates athletic highlight videos for the department's Instagram and YouTube accounts. Cammarata expanded his role through the NCAC's inaugural Social Media Corps remote internship. As a social media intern for the NCAC, Cammarata had the opportunity to cover the NCAA Div. III men's tennis national championship match won by conference peer Denison University, as it took place near his hometown of Long Beach, California. Cammarata was a Taco Bell Scholar. The program provided Cammarata opportunities to engage in career development and leadership workshops. The junior-to-be was one of 250 selected out of an applicant pool of approximately 10,000 students. Cammarata is involved with SAAC on campus and has worked for The562.org as a freelance reporter, journalist, and photographer.
Carey, a sophomore, earned his second All-NCAC honor this spring after turning in one of the best seasons in program history. He finished the year with a 75.2 average, the program's second-best since the tournament era started in 1972. Carey saved his best for last, logging a 3-under-par 69 in the final round of the NCAC Championship, which was the fourth-lowest round of the tournament. Carey tied for 15th-place. He was a two-time NCAC Athlete of the Week as a sophomore, the second of which followed his medalist honor at the Westfield Insurance Companies Invitational. Carey shot an even-par 140, which tied the program record for lowest 36-hole tournament score since 1990. He led Wooster to a pair of tournament titles, marking the first time in program history the team won multiple events in three straight seasons.
The biology major is part of the College's large-scale partnership with Wooster Community Hospital. The partnership established a Community Care Network program where Wooster students serve as health coaches for community members and do regular wellness checkups with their patients. Carey is part of SAAC and volunteers with Wooster Memorial Park, the Rockford Food Pantry and Rockford Rescue Mission.
Fink, a United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association All-American as a junior, earned All-NCAC honors for the second time this spring. He ranked third on the team with 20 goals and 34 points. His 14 assists were the second-most on the squad. Fink netted a season-best four goals in a 12-6 win over Wabash College. He passed out four assists against Hiram College as part of a five-point afternoon and had three goals and two assists at Oberlin College earlier in the season.
Fink, a business economics alumnus, compared various hospital ratings to see how they changed when private equity was and was not used as an ownership model for his Independent Study. He spent last summer as an associate intern in the underwriting department of Health Care Service Corporation, where he will be starting a full-time role as an associate underwriter. Fink's role will consist of using risk analysis to set competitive prices for group health insurance. Earlier at Wooster, Fink worked as a logistics intern at Tara International. He communicated with third-party freight lines to efficiently transport material, coordinated daily traffic, and documented bill of lading for timely deliveries. On campus, Fink was an intern for intramurals and volunteered with the Homework for Hoops program where he served as a youth mentor.
Holtzer caused 39 turnovers this spring, which ranked second on the team and rate as the sixth-most in single-season program history. He finished with 92 caused turnovers, the fourth-most since it became an officially-tracked NCAA statistic in 2010. Holtzer had six games this spring with at least four caused turnovers, led by five in a key 13-8 NCAC win at Kenyon College in mid-April. His other games with four caused turnovers came against Saint Vincent College, Westminster College, Wittenberg University, DePauw University, and Wabash College. The alumnus added a career-high 53 groundballs, 10 of which came against Wabash.
The business economics alumnus looked at if it is more affordable for households to rent or buy a home within a five-year tenure period for his Independent Study. The recent graduate was a shared services coordinator for National Interstate Insurance where he maintained client records and collaborated with business stakeholders. He was previously a property manager for J Roc Development where he managed tenant communications and supported services by working to resolve any issues. At J Roc, Holtzer maintained leases and renewal documents and led prospective tenants on site tours. Holtzer has additional experience as a community real estate intern for Canton All People. There, he provided research and analytics of area properties in downtown Canton. He accepted a job as an associate asset manager at Weston, a commercial real estate firm in Cleveland.
Kellogg, a USILA All-American as a sophomore, earned All-NCAC honors for the second time this spring. He led Wooster's offense with 40 goals and 23 assists. Kellogg became the 10th player in program history to surpass 100 career goals and ended 2025 with 122, a total tied for the sixth-most in program history. His 203 points are the fifth-most in program history and he hit the 200 mark with three assists and two goals against Wabash. Kellogg totaled eight points against Hiram with four goals and four assists. He dropped in seven goals against Otterbein University and scored six times against Messiah University.
Kellogg is a biology major and attended the NCAA Student-Athlete Leadership Forum in the fall.
Schulze was a mainstay in the starting lineup as a senior, playing in all 17 games. He scored 11 goals, passed out five assists, scooped up 10 groundballs, and caused two turnovers. The alumnus scored twice in a tight 10-9 loss to John Carroll University and passed out two assists in a 13-9 win over Westminster. Schulze was a key in a 14-11 win at DePauw with three groundballs and two caused turnovers.
The business economics major used solar potential to study how rooftop solar affects housing pricing in the United States. Last summer, Schulze was an event sales operations manager for Blue Pacific Event Services. There, Schulze managed daily ticket sales operations for the Ventura County Fair and coordinated the optimization of sales operations. He supervised and coordinated a team of 10-15 employees and oversaw cash handling, transactions, and logistics to maintain accuracy and efficiency. Schulze gained economics experience as a finance summer analyst at Capstone Global Management in 2023. There, he conducted comprehensive research and analysis vital to company projects, ensuring accurate and timely delivery of information. He developed and presented detailed research to senior management that effectively communicated findings. Schulze was an operations intern with Oakview Group working closely with the Ventura County Fair in 2022 and 2023.
Colleges and universities with CSC memberships may nominate up to six student-athletes for the men's at-large contest. Eligible sports for Wooster in the at-large contest are men's golf and men's lacrosse. The athletic criteria differs per sport in the at-large contest, but all honorees must be at least a sophomore with a 3.50 cumulative GPA.