2019 Startups to Watch: ShotTracker sensors detect high-scoring year for sports tech firm
January 14, 2019 | Austin Barnes
Editor’s note: Startland selected 12 Kansas City firms to spotlight for its annual Startups to Watch list. The following is one of 2019’s companies. Click here to view the full, ranked list of Startups to Watch.
ShotTracker’s elevator pitch: ShotTracker is a sensor-based technology that tracks statistics and analytics for basketball practice and games in real-time. It’s a small sensor that goes on the player and a small sensor that goes in the ball. We have partnerships with Spaulding, Willson, Under Armour, Adidas, and Nike. There are sensors around the arena — or facility, where we track the location of the player and the ball within two to five centimeters.
Davyeon Ross is an athlete who likes to win, he said of the defining characteristic that has helped him turn his Merriam-based company — ShotTracker — into a startup slam dunk.
Founders: Davyeon Ross and Bruce Ianni
Founding year: 2013
Amount raised to date: $26.5 million
Noteworthy investor: Magic Johnson, David Stern, Brian Howard, Seventy-Six Capital, The L.A. Dodgers, KCRise Fund
Programs completed: Dodgers Accelerator Program
Current employee count: 30
“We have two founders who have already exited startups in the past,” said Ross, co-founder of ShotTracker. “When you look at [our] leadership team and board of advisors, people like David Stern — who was commissioner of the NBA for almost 40 years and is really trying to revolutionize the game of basketball — those are all things that are critical to allow us to be where we are today.”
Such experience, coupled with the hustle instilled in an athlete-minded founding team, has brought ShotTracker from an idea on the bench to a position at center court of the Kansas City startup ecosystem in under 10 years, Ross said in anticipation of a record-breaking year of partnerships, capital raises, and product rollouts for the company.
“We have an amazing group of people and individuals. I think as founders, you want to make sure that those people get a return on the hard work and efforts that they’re putting in,” he said of putting his team first in every business decision made by ShotTracker executives.
Mimicking a layup drill, ShotTracker signed deal after deal with college basketball teams, broadcast networks, and tournaments in 2018, Ross said, recalling the events as momentum buildings moments for the company.
Click here to read more about ShotTracker’s performance in 2018.
“The more success we can have in Kansas City the better,” Ross said of the months and years ahead. “[That’s what] we think about when we think about the process of where we’re going as a company.”
Davyeon Ross and Bruce Ianni, ShotTracker
1) Bungii
2) ShotTracker
3) RiskGenius
4) Metactive
5) Pepper IoT
6) Signal Kit
7) Life Equals
8) Bellwethr
9) Homebase.ai
10) Tea-Biotics Kombucha
11) SquareOffs
12) Zohr

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Back2KC effort attempts to bring Kansas City expatriates home to an emerging innovation hub
A first-of-its-kind event is drawing successful Kansas Citians who’ve left the region “Back2KC” Thursday and Friday for a hands-on glimpse at the city’s evolving innovation economy, Darcy Howe said. As managing director of the KCRise Fund — a co-investment fund that works with venture capital investors to support early-stage Kansas City companies — Howe saw…
Artist Vi Tran to KC-based innovators: Wipe ‘local’ label from your vocabulary
Some roots are best left behind, but not forgotten, said multi-faceted Kansas City artist Vi Tran. Others are worth holding close. Speaking at Startland’s recent Innovation Exchange, the actor, playwright, musician and owner of The Buffalo Room decried the idea that innovators who choose to stay in places like Kansas City are any less worthy…
The not-so-secret Sauce behind KC hip hop entrepreneur’s success: Authenticity
Royce “Sauce” Handy wears his influences and inspiration like pins on the outside of his well-worn jean jacket. The KCK-born hip hop entrepreneur embraces his identity: A collector of Goosebumps books. A student of history. A fan of 1990s family sitcoms. And he’s unapologetically black. His lips twist into a smile and his eyes brighten…
