University of Michigan Athletics
Nicholas Coles is a proficient software engineer and personal fitness trainer with diverse experience across multiple industries. Currently a Software Subteam Member for Project Alivio at M-HEAL, Nicholas has previously worked as a Personal Fitness Trainer with University of Michigan Athletics, maintaining a 100% client satisfaction rate. As an Enterprise Data Engineering Intern at Protiviti, Nicholas modernized customer remediation software and created an intuitive testing pipeline. In a Software Engineering Intern role at knowbl, Nicholas integrated the HubSpot API into a lead capture bot, significantly reducing data retrieval times. Serving as Team Lead and Account Director at Michigan Advertising & Marketing, Nicholas revitalized branding and enhanced marketing strategies for a local bar. Nicholas held the position of President and Board Executive at Mary Markley Dorm, managing a $10,000 budget and earning recognition as the "Top Student Residence Board." Nicholas is pursuing a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science with a minor in UX Design at the University of Michigan.
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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!