Senior Season — 2014-15Jagtap gave the Big Red a College Squash Association All-America First Team selection for an eighth consecutive season, when he earned the honor after a season in which he was ranked fifth in the nation and advanced to the quarterfinals of the CSA Individual Championships. He also earned All-Ivy League First Team honors for a third consecutive season after posting a stellar 14-2 record in team matches, competing exclusively from the No. 1 position. His only two losses in team matches this season came in a fifth game, with an injury forcing him to retire in one of them. Jagtap ended the season on a five-match winning streak, including a sweep of his three matches at the Hoehn Cup. He wrapped up his career at Cornell with an incredible record of 53-15, with the bulk of his matches coming from the No. 1 and No. 2 positions in the lineup.
Junior Season — 2013-14Jagtap earned his second All-Ivy League honor after posting a 5-2 record in league matches. He once again anchored the No. 2 position behind four-time All-American Nick Sachvie '14, leading the team with a 13-3 record overall. He was dominant in most of his matches, forced to a fifth game only twice. One of those occasions was a pivotal come-from-behind victory Feb. 15 against Rochester's Mario Yanez in the Potter Cup consolation semifinals. Jagtap won the final two games, 11-7 and 12-10, to win the match and help the Big Red to a 5-4 victory over the Yellowjackets and – eventually – a boost of two spots to the No. 6 ranking in the country by season's end. Jagtap was a unanimous All-Ivy selection. Jagtap finished the season ranked 10th in the country by the College Squash Association.
Sophomore Season — 2012-13Jagtap settled in to the No. 2 position, winning 14 of his 18 matches on the season en route to his first All-Ivy League honor. His individual winning percentage of .778 led the team. After winning seven of his first nine matches in three games, Jagtap went through a stretch of hard-fought matches down the stretch. His come-from-behind five-game victory over Rochester's Neil Cordell on Jan. 23 helped the Big Red move up to fifth in the national rankings, then Jagtap rallied for another five-game victory against Princeton's Samuel Kang on Feb. 8 to help spur the squad's 5-4 victory over the previously undefeated and top-ranked Tigers.
Freshman Season — 2011-12Jagtap played in the highest spots in the lineup among any of the Big Red's rookies, appearing in the Nos. 2, 3, 4 and 5 positions. He posted a 12-6 record, winning eight of his last 11 matches. Included in that stretch was a five-game victory over Yale's John Roberts on Feb. 17 to help the Big Red win its first Potter Cup quarterfinal in program history.
Prior to CornellAt 16 years old, Jagtap was the youngest player to ever serve as captain of the Indian national junior team. He helped the team finish second in the 2009 Asian Junior Championship, also playing No. 2 on the Indian team that came in fourth at the 2008 World Junior Championship in Switzerland. He competed as India's No. 1 for the Under-17 and Under-19 age groups, having also won numerous individual international titles.
PersonalAditya Ravindra Jagtap is the son of Ravindra and Anupama Jagtap. He is enrolled in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences.