This NFL linebacker spent the offseason working in venture capital

The New York Jets return to training camp today in New Jersey, which marks the end of whatever the team’s players did during the offseason. And one new Jets player spent his offseason planning for life after football.

Josh Martin, who signed with the Jets in November, spent the spring and summer interning at a tech venture capital firm in New York City.

It’s a smart move by a player who recognizes that a professional football career is usually very short. (The average is 3.3 years, according to the NFL.) As Panthers star linebacker Luke Kuechly told Yahoo Finance last week, “Football is finite.”

Martin, who is originally from Houston, Texas, graduated from Columbia University in 2013, where he was an All-Ivy League first team selection. He spent two successful seasons with the Kansas City Chiefs, where he played in 19 games. In 2014, Pro Football Focus assigned Martin its highest grade in the league for special teams and for kickoff coverage. Martin then spent one season with the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, where he played two games before getting waived. Last October, he signed with the Indianapolis Colts practice squad before the Jets scooped him up.

Put simply: Martin is a good example of the kind of players who make up the bulk of the NFL—not marquee stars who get to spend their entire career with one team, but journeymen who are used to bouncing around. Martin is realistic about life in the NFL, an acronym jokingly defined by players as “not for long.”

Putting the NFL offseason to good use

During the offseason, Martin tells Yahoo Finance, “You have a lot of free time, and you look for ways to fill that free time through internships or vacations. When it’s time to focus on football during the fall I focus on football, and in the offseason, I try to take advantage of the opportunities available to me.”

At a Columbia alumni event last year, he happened to meet someone from the tech firm ffvc, based in Manhattan, and he took advantage of the opportunity, landing a paid internship. (The firm won’t say how much it paid.) Martin was the first professional athlete to intern with ffvc, which has made early-stage investments in buzzy startups like Earnest, Indiegogo, Plated, Contently, and HowAboutWe, the dating site that sold to Barry Diller’s IAC and is now part of Match Group, which includes Tinder.

“Josh was a major value-add to our firm during his internship,” says ffvc managing director Ryan Armbrust. “He worked closely with our technology team to analyze and organize data on our portfolio companies and within broader industries. Throughout the internship, he also sharpened his coding skills, and got first-hand insight into what it’s like working with early-stage technology companies.”