Jordan Fliegel

Jordan Fliegel (born 1986) is an American entrepreneur and venture capitalist, focused on the sports industry.

Jordan Fliegel
Born
NationalityAmerican
Occupationentrepreneur
early-stage technology investor
TitleTechstars Sports Accelerator (Managing Director)
Draft.com (Former CEO)
CoachUp.com (Founder & CEO)
Athletes of Valor (Chairman)

Fliegel is currently Managing Director of the Techstars Sports Accelerator, which he launched in 2019. Techstars Sports invests $120,000 per company in 10 startups annually, and provides mentorship, office space and hands-on support. The accelerator has 30 portfolio companies, including Ergatta, which raised $30M at a $200M valuation in 2021.

Fliegel is an investor in over 150 startups as co-founder and Managing Partner of Founders First, and is on the Advisory Board of several high-growth startups, including Fight Camp and Botkeeper

Fliegel was previously co-CEO of Draft.com ("DRAFT"), a venture-backed fantasy sports company headquartered in NYC. In 2017, he sold DRAFT for $48M to Paddy Power Betfair.

Fliegel was Founder and CEO of CoachUp.com, the leading sports coaching platform with over 25,000 coaches, backed by $15M in venture-capital and headquartered in Boston. NBA MVP Stephen Curry is Fliegel's partner and the lead spokesman at CoachUp. Fliegel is currently Chairman of CoachUp, and led the company's last internal $1.5M round of funding. Fliegel was also Chairman of Athletes of Valor, a venture-backed social impact company , which was bought by CoachUp in 2018.

Fliegel writes and lecturers on entrepreneurship, investing, and leadership , and is the author of two books, "Coaching Up!" (Wiley & Sons, 2016) and "Reaching Another Level." Fliegel and his companies were named Inc “30 under 30”, Forbes "30 under 30", BBJ “40 under 40”, and Finalist for Ernst & Young “New England Entrepreneur of the Year”.

Fliegel is a former professional basketball player for Hapoel Jerusalem, and former professional basketball team co-owner of the ANBL 4X Champion New Zealand Breakers.

Early life

Fliegel grew up in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He is the grandson of former professional basketball player Bernie Fliegel and godson of Guido Goldman, founder of the German Marshall Fund. He attended Cambridge Rindge & Latin School where he played basketball.[1] He graduated from Bowdoin College, with a double major in Government & Legal Studies and Philosophy, and a minor in history. As a Senior he won the Jefferson Davis Book Award, Bowdoin's top prize for academic achievement in Government & Legal Studies.

Collegiate basketball

Fliegel played collegiate basketball at Bowdoin College. As a 3-year starter and co-captain, he earned Team MVP, All-league, All-state, All-New England, and Jewish Sports Review All-American honors while leading Bowdoin to a 22–7 record (best in school history), the NESCAC Championship game, and the 2nd round of the Men's NCAA Division III Tournament.

Professional basketball

Fliegel played Professional Basketball for Hapoel Migdal Jerusalem[2] in the Israeli Premier and Eurocup Basketball League,[3] and for Hapoel Kfar Saba in the Israeli National League for 2 seasons (from 2008 to 2010).[4]

Business

Fliegel went from professional basketball to business school, where he earned an MBA from Tel Aviv University. He then founded CoachUp,[5][6] a venture-backed startup operating a website connecting athletes with sports coaches. CoachUp has been covered in outlets such as the Wall Street Journal,[7] USA Today,[8] the Boston Globe, and the Huffington Post.[9][10][11]

References

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