
Hobbies and interests
Hiking And Backpacking
Golf
Alpine Skiing
Tennis
Travel And Tourism
Singing
Acting And Theater
Caleb Nelson
1x
Finalist1x
Winner
Caleb Nelson
1x
Finalist1x
WinnerBio
I am a high school senior looking to attend college and major in finance. I have leadership roles in multiple clubs, play two varsity sports and have a high class rank.
Education
Saugerties Senior High School
High SchoolMiscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Bachelor's degree program
Majors of interest:
- Finance and Financial Management Services
- Business Administration, Management and Operations
Career
Dream career field:
Financial Services
Dream career goals:
Sports
Golf
Varsity2021 – 20265 years
Tennis
Varsity2022 – Present4 years
Awards
- NYSPHSAA Scholar Atlete
Arts
Saugerties Senior High School
Acting2021 – 2026
Public services
Volunteering
Key Club — Secretary2022 – Present
Dennis E. Beaver Memorial Golf Scholarship
WinnerGolf is not a game you master. It is a game you keep showing up for, and that distinction matters more than most people realize when they first pick up a club.
I have been playing for over five years and the thing that strikes me most looking back is how much the game mirrors life. You hit far more bad shots than good ones. Rounds that start well fall apart. Putts that should drop do not. The only thing you can control is how you respond, and golf teaches you that lesson over and over again until it becomes instinct. No matter what happens on the course I try to keep my composure. A bad hole does not have to become a bad round. A bad round does not have to define your season. That mindset did not come naturally to me. Golf built it, one frustrating shot at a time. Learning to reset after a bad shot and refocus on the next one is a skill that took years to develop, but it is one of the most valuable things the game has given me.
What keeps me coming back is not just the competition. It is the people. Some of my favorite moments in golf have nothing to do with the scorecard. Playing alongside my dad and my closest friends, walking a course on a clear morning, laughing between holes, those are the memories that stick. Golf has a way of slowing everything down and reminding you that the people you are with matter more than the score. There is a reason people say you learn more about a person in one round of golf than in months of ordinary interaction. The game strips away distraction and puts you side by side with someone for four hours. The friendships I have built on the course are ones I expect to carry for the rest of my life.
The game has also taught me what genuine improvement feels like. Over five years I have gotten stronger, more consistent, and more mentally tough. That growth did not happen overnight. It came from showing up, putting in the work, and being honest with myself about where my game needed to improve. Golf demands honesty in a way few other sports do. You call your own penalties. You keep your own score. There is no referee to blame and no teammate to cover for your mistakes. That culture of personal accountability has shaped how I approach everything else in my life.
When I think about the leadership positions I have held, three years as Class President, two years as Key Club Secretary, President of the choir, Founder of my school's broadcasting club, the through line is the same lesson golf taught me. You are not always going to have a perfect day. Things will go wrong. What matters is whether you stay composed, keep working, and bring the people around you along with you. Golf showed me that long before any of those roles did. The ability to stay steady when things are not going your way is something I developed on the course and carried into every room I have led since.
I still remember my first eagle on hole nine at the Rip, I probably always will. That is the other thing golf gives you, moments of genuine reward that feel earned because you know exactly how much work went into them. The good shots stay with you. They remind you why you keep playing and why the bad ones are worth pushing through.
Beyond high school I will carry the patience, composure, and work ethic that this game has built in me into everything I pursue at Binghamton University and beyond. Golf taught me that progress is slow, honesty is non negotiable, and the people you play with make all the difference. Those are lessons I do not expect to outgrow.