University of Michigan Athletics
Dubem Amene is a highly accomplished individual with diverse experience in finance and athletics. Currently serving as a Fixed Income Summer Analyst at Morgan Stanley and an Investment Analyst at BlackGen Capital, Dubem has previously worked as an Investment Banking Summer Analyst for KeyBank and a Strategy & Management Student Consultant at Bank of America. Dubem's leadership skills were further demonstrated as the Team Captain for the MAP D-League Fellow at Make A Play Foundation, having been selected as one of only 32 All-Pro Captains to mentor peers in professional development. As a student athlete at the University of Michigan, Dubem has achieved notable accolades, including being a 3x NCAA All-American, the 2023 Big Ten 400m Indoor Champion, and a 2x University of Michigan School Record Holder. Dubem's academic background includes a Bachelor's degree in Economics from the University of Michigan, expected in 2024, and a High School Diploma from Southfield Christian School.
This person is not in the org chart
This person is not in any teams
University of Michigan Athletics
The University of Michigan has a rich and storied athletics tradition. Intercollegiate competition officially began in 1865-66 when the baseball team won its first three contests it played that season. In 1879, football started its storied tradition. Women's athletics established formal varsity sports in 1973-74 with U-M fielding basketball, field hockey, swimming and diving, tennis and volleyball teams. Men's soccer and women's water polo were added as varsity sports in 2000-01. Michigan athletic teams have claimed more than 50 national championships in 12 sports over the years, beginning with football's 1901 national title. Since then, Wolverine dynasties have developed in football, men's swimming and diving and ice hockey. In fact, no other NCAA Division I program boasts more national titles in hockey or men's swimming and diving than the Wolverines. In 2005, Michigan softball captured the nation's attention, winning its first Women's College World Series and becoming the first school east of the Mississippi to do so. Go Blue!