Batten’s Katstra Among Those Named to Honors Court

One is a Charlottesville-bred, third-generation Hoo with an eye on a future career in counter-terrorism. The other is a studio art major from Bologna, Italy, who loves to cook.

Both are quite adept at tossing a round orange ball through a 10-foot-high ring.

But on Wednesday, University of Virginia men’s basketball players Austin Katstra and Tomas Woldetensae were recognized for their work in the classroom.The National Association of Basketball Coaches named the rising fourth-year students to its Honors Court, a group of student-athletes from across the country who earned varsity letters and had a grade-point average of 3.2 or higher at the conclusion of the 2019-20 academic year.

(On Thursday, the NABC also bestowed upon the UVA men’s basketball team its Team Excellence Award, which recognizes outstanding academic achievement by a team with a cumulative grade-point average of 3.0 or better.)

Katstra and Woldetensae, members of the reigning NCAA champion Cavaliers, have made their marks both on and off the court since arriving on Grounds.

Katstra – who came to UVA as a recruited walk-on and is perhaps best known for his highlight plays at the end of Cavalier victories alongside fellow Albemarle High School alumnus Grant Kersey, a team player-manager – earned an athletic scholarship during a touching scene at a 2019 practice that was captured on video.

“That was a big-time free throw,” UVA head coach Tony Bennett told Katstra at the end of a foul-shooting drill. “You just got a scholarship.”

Katstra, who was swarmed by jubilant teammates, had dreamed of earning a basketball scholarship since he was a young boy. His father, Dirk, and grandfather, Richard, both played basketball at UVA.

But Katstra’s time at UVA has been about much more than basketball.

The foreign affairs major, who graduated a year early in May and is now working toward a master’s degree from UVA’s Batten School of Leadership and Public Policy, glows about his professors.

“I think great professors can really make or break your college experience,” Katstra said, “and I’ve been lucky to have a lot of great ones.”

Garrett Hall at Sunset

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