Video: ShotTracker fan app courts NAIA tourney crowds with AR experience

March 13, 2018  |  Tommy Felts and Bobby Burch

ShotTracker fan app

A new ShotTracker fan app — expected to launch today — will combine real-time analytics with augmented reality for a first-of-its-kind fan engagement opportunity at next week’s Division 1 NAIA basketball tournament, said co-founder Davyeon Ross.

“We want to make the experience as great as possible for the end user,” Ross said, noting his company’s recent tech upgrades to the app, an earlier iteration of which had a soft debut during the 2017 tournament. “It will really change the game.”

Merriam-based ShotTracker’s TEAM system tracks multiple players with an array of sensors — secured to each player, within each Spalding basketball, and in the rafters — plotting the games’ shots in real time. The analytics will display on fans’ smartphones through the ShotTracker fan app, Ross said.

Keep reading below the video.

“We asked: ‘How do we continue to get our fans more engaged during the course of a game?’” said Marc Boerigter, manager of sponsorships for NAIA. “It’s great to look at statistics up on a scoreboard, but when you can pop open the app and actually look at the shot chart, or at halftime check out the stats immediately, those are pushing the envelope with technology.”

NAIA’s willingness to interact with fans using the tech-enabled system continues its tradition of setting precedents, he said. The athletic program played host to the first collegiate basketball tournament in 1937, Boerigter noted.

“When you’re doing something that’s innovative, it’s important to be first,” added Ross, a native of Trinidad and Tobago, West Indies, who received a basketball scholarship from Benedictine College, himself playing in the NAIA as a four-year letterman, leading the nation in field-goal shooting percentage.

This year’s Division 1 championship tournament runs March 14-20 at Municipal Auditorium. Check out the bracket here.

 

“Our tournament is difficult,” said Boerigter. “We have 32 teams. There’s only 10 minutes at halftime and 10 minutes between games. Eight games a day for the first three days. We’re rolling nonstop. Logistically it can be a nightmare for an organization to come in. ShotTracker came in last year and really knocked it out of the park.”

Fan reaction in 2017 was surprising, he said. Word of the app’s lowkey rollout “spread like wildfire through the arena.”

“The demographic of individuals who flipped over the app were the folks who were in the 50 to 70 range, age-wise. These are folks who have been coming to our tournament, some of them, for 20 or 30 years,” Boerigter said. “And we rolled out something new for them last year, and they absolutely loved that they were able to see things they weren’t able to see before.”

NAIA officials hope this year’s version of the app will appeal to tech-savvy fans of all ages, as well as families, he said. The tournament sees an average of 40,000 fans each year, according to the NAIA.

ShotTracker’s technology also offers something for the basketball teams’ coaching staffs, Ross said, noting a new fatigue index will help them understand the performance load of players.

Such tools will come in useful during halftime, Boerigter said, when ShotTracker will deliver analytics without the typical wait for paper copies of reports.

“Our coaches still can’t use the technology on the bench, from the standpoint of NAIA rules, but as things continue to develop in sports technology, it’s going to happen,” he said. “The stats that they are getting in paper form at halftime are getting to them five minutes after they can look at them on ShotTracker. They can make adjustments faster.”

With the NAIA headquartered in Kansas City, a partnership with ShotTracker seemed like a great fit for a variety of reasons, said Boerigter, a former NAIA football player and Kansas City Chiefs wide receiver.

“NAIA already is partnered with Spalding. Davyeon and I both played in the NAIA,” he said. “Everything kind of aligned for us.”

ShotTracker was named one of Startland’s Top Kansas City Startups to Watch in 2017.

ShotTracker

ShotTracker

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2018 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Missouri ranks 7th in electric vehicle use, but access to charging remains a key barrier

    By Tommy Felts | May 27, 2022

    Editor’s note: This story is part of a series on climate change in the Kansas City region produced by the KC Media Collective to support and enhance local journalism so every person in Kansas City can lead a richer life. Members of the KC Media Collective are KCUR 89.3, American Public Square, Kansas City PBS/Flatland, Missouri Business Alert, Startland…

    Chris Goode, Ruby Jean's Juicery

    Junior Achievement honoring Ruby Jean’s founder with its 2022 KC Innovator Award

    By Tommy Felts | May 27, 2022

    A group hoping to inspire the next generation of leaders, thinkers and doers has tapped a young entrepreneur with a healthy appetite for expansion as its next KC Innovator Award winner. Chris Goode, founder of Ruby Jean’s Juicery, is set to be honored with the award Nov. 1 during the Junior Achievement of Kansas City’s…

    DJ Stewart, Journey Pro Wrestling

    Put a ring in it: Journey Pro enters the ‘Era of Agnes’ with new location on KC’s East Side

    By Tommy Felts | May 27, 2022

    Founder combines passion for wrestling, fighting cancer in latest show Every window was broken. A solid foot of trash covered the floor. And there was a strange smell coming from the bathrooms. Yet, DJ Stewart stepped into the abandoned section of the Agnes Arts Center and knew it was going to be the perfect home…

    Norman Kump, Kansas City National Security Campus (KCNSC); Simon Williams; and Venita Thurman, Grandview High School

    Real-world ready: Honeywell partners with local high schools, offering full-time careers to Grandview graduates

    By Tommy Felts | May 27, 2022

    Simon Williams wasn’t interested in college; he instead saw a professional path after high school that avoided costly and time-wasting diversions. “I just didn’t want to start my career four years later, with almost $100,000 in the hole,” said the recent Grandview graduate and new hire at Honeywell as an assembler adjuster. The U.S. Department…