Magic Johnson, David Stern headline $5M round in ShotTracker

October 19, 2016  |  Bobby Burch

Magic Johnson with the ShotTracker team.

A sojourn to the City of Angels has taken on magical meaning for ShotTracker.

The Merriam-based firm announced Wednesday that basketball legend Earvin “Magic” Johnson and former NBA Commissioner David Stern are among a group of investors that have injected $5 million into its coffers. The duo of high-profile investors will help accelerate the wearable tech company’s newest product, ShotTracker TEAM, as the company wraps up its final weeks at the Los Angeles Dodgers’ accelerator.

ShotTracker co-founders Davyeon Ross and Bruce Ianni.

ShotTracker co-founders Davyeon Ross and Bruce Ianni.

The round — which features at least three funds with offices in the Los Angeles area — includes investments from Elysian Park Ventures, Greycroft Partners, Sovereign’s Capital, Irish Angels, ward.ventures and Service Provider Capital.

ShotTracker co-founder Davyeon Ross said that the capital will afford the company an array of opportunities.

“This raise allows us to commercialize the team version, build out our team and support the initial launches of our product into the market,” Ross said.

For its first product, ShotTracker developed a wearable device for an individual basketball player. The device has three pieces — a wrist sensor, net sensor and mobile app — that track shot attempts, makes and misses.

Its second product — ShotTracker TEAM — can be used by a group of players to capture the same shooting metrics in real time. The firm partnered with sporting equipment giant Spalding to implant sensors into basketballs that interact with sensors on a player’s shoes and the rafters above the court. The team product, however, offers coaches more insight into player performance, including box stats, shooting charts, line-up comparisons and player efficiency ratings.STTeam_HIW

Ross said that he’s thrilled to have such seasoned basketball veterans as Johnson and Stern on the ShotTracker team to help guide its success.

An NBA Hall of Fame inductee in 2002, Johnson was a five-time NBA champion, was named by Ebony Magazine as one of America’s most influential black businessmen in 2009 and owns part of the Dodgers. Stern served as the commissioner of the NBA for 30 years, overseeing the rise of seven new NBA teams under his tenure and in 2014 was named to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame.

“Earvin and David are both visionaries and leaders in their own right,” Ross said. “Earvin revolutionized the point guard position and set an example for athletes transitioning into successful businessmen and women. David has been responsible for what the NBA is today and its success. To have both of these individuals on board is incredible validation for our vision and a sign of things to come.”

ShotTracker co-founders Bruce Ianni and Ross have raised about $10 million for the firm, which in January was named a Startland Top 10 KC Startup to Watch.  Check out the video below to learn more on this announcement. 

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

Tagged , ,
Featured Business
    Featured Founder

      2016 Startups to Watch

        stats here

        Related Posts on Startland News

        Dr. Marion Pierson, MO Hives KC

        For the good of the hive: KC pediatrician builds buzz with award-winning urban bee farm effort

        By Tommy Felts | December 7, 2021

        No one is more surprised by pediatrician Marion Pierson’s newfound career success as a beekeeper and advocate for urban apiaries, the Prairie Village doctor said. “I didn’t know this would happen,” Pierson said. “In fact, I’m scared of bugs. My husband asked me how I was going to start a bee farm. When I’m in…

        Hometown startups want their due; sister-led QuickHire’s $1.4M round could be just the start

        By Tommy Felts | December 6, 2021

        QuickHire’s potential for success is enhanced — not limited — by the young tech startup’s south-central Kansas geography, said Deborah Gladney, one half of a sister-led Wichita venture that recently announced its $1.4 million round boosted by a leading Kansas City fund. “Being from Wichita, we’ve come to know and appreciate everything this city has to…

        Toilet Bombs by Bear Soap Co., Soap Bar in Westport

        Toilet bombs dropped less than two weeks ago; retailers can’t seem to keep them on the shelves

        By Tommy Felts | December 4, 2021

        Bear Soap Co.’s latest bestseller might have begun as an accident, but the bath bombs for toilet bowls are making a splash as shoppers discover a cheeky new stocking stuffer that fizzes beyond the holiday season, said Matt Bramlette. “The toilet bombs can be a fun novelty gift; or they can be something that people…

        Kiffany Bosserman, Cottontale, Cookies and Creamery

        Cotton candy calling: Why a South KC sweets shop’s signature treat is still hand-spun with an air of nostalgia

        By Tommy Felts | December 4, 2021

        Each ding of the oven generates more buzz for this whimsy-frosted bake shop and creamery in South Kansas City. But it’s the soft, sticky sweet treat that fills small tubs and lines the store’s shelves — (hand) spinning the entrepreneurial dreams of its owner into a sugar-rush of a reality.  “I really hit the jackpot,”…