A majority of college athletes turn to a career other than sports once they graduate - and Tom Brady shared an insight into what he prepared for potential employers if he never made it in the NFL.
The sixth round pick, taken 199th overall in the 2000 NFL Draft, shared his resume all the way back in September of 2014 on Facebook.
Brady shared a photo of the resume that he 'found', adding that he 'thought I was going to need this after the 5th round'.
Instead, Brady had to settle for a career as the greatest quarterback of all time - playing from 2000 until he announced his retirement for a second time on Wednesday.
Back then, Brady's resume included his two summers worth of experience working as an intern at Merrill Lynch as an assistant to a sales broker, as well as multiple gigs working as a sales rep at golf courses in Michigan while he attended college.
But now, Brady will retire with a resume boasting three NFL MVP awards, six All-Pro mentions, 15 Pro-Bowl mentions, seven Super Bowl titles, and five Super Bowl MVP awards.
In addition, Brady will retire owning almost every major career quarterback record in the league's history.
Brady is also a guaranteed first-ballot Hall-of-Famer, with the quarterback set to be enshrined in Canton in 2028.
The quarterback is now set to transition into the broadcast booth - with a reported deal with Fox worth $375million over ten years.