| I know one who went into marketing of sports equipment, and later fashion |
OP is asking about top colleges. |
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My nephew played baseball for Dartmouth. He played minor league ball for five years, retired during height of covid, and started a very successful start up company with a Dartmouth teammate funded by an alumni (and former ball player). He’s easily earning close to seven figures after just a few years and bought a home on the beach in Southern California.
He did okay. |
| If they played football, aren't the odds that they have brain damage? |
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My H did Econ and is a SVP for a international biotech company. He went to Duke for MBA. From the top of my head and looking at H's Facebook:
This is not comprehensive, I stopped at 1/2 page and some are not on FB. Columbia MBA and is now a consultant at Bain GW med school and dropped out (she's a SAHM now) stayed at the same school for med school, Stanford fellowship and she's now a trauma / ER surgeon one played profesional hockey (I think? He played in the NHL). He's president of a RE company another one also played in the NHL and he has his own coaching (?) company One played profesional lacrosse and he's now a coach one is basketball coach for USC one played soccer in Europe and he's now an agent one played in the NFL, his dad was a player too Wall Street on the sale side and now on the buy side at T. Rowe Price one won silver at the Olympics and is now in sales for a blockchain Duke MBA and healthcare consulting one played or was selected for an NFL team (I'm not familiar with American Football), then went to Wall Street in IB and he's now a CFO for an industrial company MD for a big bank in IB / M&A USC dental school and he was a dentist for a while, he's an entrepreneur now USC med school and he's a pediatrician one played for a minor league team and he's a VP for a bank entrepreneur doing something related to sports nutrition baseball coach at a prep school in New England Yale Law and is some sort of conservative rising star weather girl at a local NBC station one works for the national security one has his own travel baseball company and was an aspiring actor commodity trader one is our financial advisor one comes from major $$$$, married major $$$ and is an interior decorator. She was featured in better homes and gardens one works for Teach for America one works in commercial real estate and is also a musician lawyers, lots of lawyers VP of marketing for a large company (think Procter & Gamble etc.) Stern MBA and IB on Wall Street management at medical device company one is a VP for a big entertainment company |
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If they're dipshits -- and they usually are vis a vis the average classmate -- they generally go onto work normal 9 to 5 gigs. It's a fake myth that all these millionaire exec alums just can't wait to hire washed up dipshit athletes and give them tons of cash with no accountability. I would bet the average former D1 athlete is selling insurance or cars at a Chevy dealership. And the average former female college athletes is in some make-work HR role or a fat SAHM.
Yeah yeah cherry pick the few that got into Stanford law or is now some Goldman executive or got rich off government set-aside minority contracts.
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My oldest was a 4 year athlete at Princeton. High stats kid who got recruited for his sport. Graduated a few years ago with an engineering degree. Doing great having launched a tech company.
His athlete friends are doing exactly what you'd expect: investment banking, management consulting, tech, grad school, etc. It is an impressive group that will do very well in life for all the reasons already laid out in this thread. |
| It’s not a myth. All Ivy athletes have a bond and seem to stick together. If you thin Ivy alumni help each other, you should see Ivy athletes in their sport. |
I’ve never heard a “fake myth” that millionaire execs like to hire washed up dipshit athletes and give them tons of cash with no accountability. Where did you hear this myth? |
Few if any Ivy athletes are dipshits. They get a definite boost to get in but all have to prove they can do the work. |
| DS played football at Stanford, majored in poly sci. He’s in software sales and makes a ton of money. |
I think this is in the right direction. |
Yes, their work ethic, team work, and social nature are HUGE wins for many organizations that want a prestige educational pedigree, smarts, and social IQ. |
Yes! Athletes are naturally interested in the performance of the body. Lots of orthopedists are former athletes. |
| OP here. Thanks for the feedback. This thread encapsulates my thinking, but I wanted to confirm it. |