Football tech startup Lazser Down scores big with NCAA championship game
December 14, 2017 | Bobby Burch
When two out-of-state foes face off Saturday at Children’s Mercy Park, the NCAA Division II Championship game will still host a hometown team.
The title game — between West Florida University and Texas A&M University-Commerce — features local tech created by Lazser Down, a Kansas City-based startup that created a new down marker system that uses lasers to display the yardage teams need on a bright LED screen.
It’s the biggest validation yet for the football firm, which has a goal to be the go-to solution for leagues from pee-wee to the National Football League, Lazser Down founder Mike Foster said.
“It’ll be awesome — it’s the first time we’ll be in anything of this magnitude,” said Foster, a retired college football coach of more than 30 years. “The
cherry on top is that it’s here in Kansas City. Being in our hometown makes it even better.”
Using an infrared laser similar to what’s in surveying equipment, Lazser Down provides instant information on the distance needed to gain a first down via a large LED screen, helping coaches and players with strategy, Foster said. An operator need only push a button to change the down, Foster said. The technology does not yet sync with scoreboards, but that is in the works, he added.
The bright LED screen also improves the experience for fans, who’ve come to expect yellow lines on TV broadcasts indicating how far a team must travel to nab the first down, Foster said.
“The NFL wants people to be able to experience the same things in the stadium that they do at home,” Foster said. “They’re losing butts in the seats because of the technology available on television. We help bridge that gap.”
The technology represents the next step in down and distance technology for football teams, officials and leagues — a shift that hasn’t occurred for about 30 years, Foster said.

Foster at Notre Dame
Football began with a cube that rotated to show the down, then to a flipboard and in 1987 transitioned to what’s still ubiquitously used across leagues and in the NFL: the Dial-a-Down. Kansas Citian Jim Egender invented the Dial-a-Down device and now sits on Lazser Down’s advisory board, Foster said.
Notre Dame and Tulane universities have both used Lazser Down during practices, Foster said, adding that Tulane has also tapped it during some games. The Kansas City Chiefs and Dallas Cowboys also have observed the tech in use to offer valuable feedback, he added.
Born from an idea he had decades ago as a coach, Foster said he and fellow staff would spend film days lamenting decisions based on poor information. Had officials and teams used Laszer Down, Foster’s teams would have made better-informed play calls, he said.
“When we’d do our post-mortem on Sunday of what we could’ve done differently, without fail, we’d talk about the communication from the press box down to the field on down and distance plays,” he said. “We’d say ‘I didn’t get it soon enough. You told me it was a long yard and it was a short yard. I would’ve called this or that.’ … We’d have these conversations and just waste time. From a coaching standpoint, it improves the communication.”
Check out NCAA Division II Championship game and Lazser Down in action at 5 p.m. Saturday on ESPN2.

2017 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Don’t like cookies? Your new favorite weirdough baker hungrily accepts the challenge
Tierney Larson is on a mission to bake the perfect cookies for those like herself with a not-so-sweet tooth, the Outliers Baked Goods owner shared. Each month, the self-taught baker and New York native experiments, developing four new adventurous flavors to please the taste buds of the outliers or weirdoughs of the dessert community —…
Shocked by a discovery while pregnant, this entrepreneur vowed to make self-care products from ingredients safe enough to eat
‘I might as well make my own’ Jess Winns, founder of Ari Rose Body Care, had always been pretty conscious of what she and her three daughters put into and onto their bodies, she said. However, as she researched more about holistic wellness while pregnant with her second daughter, Winns read about how more than…
Mediterranean of the Midwest: How this restaurateur is crafting authentic tastes for diners in the heart of Kansas
Startland News’ Startup Road Trip series explores innovative and uncommon ideas finding success in rural America and Midwestern startup hubs outside the Kansas City metro. This series is possible thanks to Go Topeka, which seeks economic success for all companies and citizens across Shawnee County through implementation of an aggressive economic development strategy that capitalizes…
