Photos: Sprint Accelerator leaders salute former managing director at demo day

June 27, 2019  |  Austin Barnes and Tommy Felts

Sprint Accelerator Demo Day

Gratitude powered down the sixth cohort of the Sprint and Dairy Farmers of America-backed Corporate Accelerator Thursday.

“I do have one more person that I need to acknowledge and that person is Doug Dresslear,” Tina Peterson, manager of the Sprint Accelerator, told a packed crowd at the National World War 1 museum’s J.C. Nichols Auditorium. 

Ari Degrote and Doug Dresslear

“Tina is emotion-less — she doesn’t cry,” Dresslaer, former managing director of the program, joked as Peterson gave a heartfelt thank you to him for his help building the accelerator, which launched in 2014. 

“We’re so excited for what he’s going to do next and to continue working with Doug in his new role at [Dairy Farmers of America],” Peterson said. 

Dresslaer accepted a new position as director of innovation at DFA in April, right as the 2019 Sprint Accelerator cohort began, he explained. 

“I jumped off the cell tower and landed on a dairy farm,” Dresslaer joked of his career transition. “… However, I started that job less than a month before this program began … not a really smart move.”

In his absence, Peterson and Ari Degrote, community and programs manager for the accelerator, stepped in to lead the cohort — which partnered heavily with DFA and saw six of the cohort’s seven startups work to innovate the dairy and agriculture space. Dresslaer lauded the duo for their hard work continuing the popular accelerator.

Click here for an introduction to the 2019 Sprint Accelerator class, which featured such companies as Brooklyn Buttery. 

“They can’t get rid of me that easily! Part of my responsibilities at DFA will be to work with these guys to keep the accelerator going forward,” Dresslaer teased. “We are all in for 2020 so I’m excited for that.”

Ari Degrote, Doug Dresslear, and Tina Peterson

Ari Degrote, Doug Dresslear, and Tina Peterson

For its part, Sprint made a commitment to launching its 5G technology over the course of the 90-day cohort — largely to the benefit of the accelerator program’s lone tech startup, Nodecraft.

Oklahoma-based Nodecraft is actively looking to hire Kansas City tech minds, announced Johnathan Yarbor, the company’s founder. 

“If you want to nerd out about how we’re building the future of online infrastructure … we’d love to talk to you,” he said of the company’s hiring plans. 

Plans for the Corporate Accelerator’s seventh cohort have yet to be formally announced, though officials from both Sprint and DFA indicated their companies were on board for 2020. 

Click here for a play-by-play on the startups’ presentations Thursday.

Check out a photo gallery from the accelerator’s demo day below.

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

2019 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Physician assistant, mom juggles healthy challenge: opening two Tropical Smoothie Cafe franchises

    By Tommy Felts | March 12, 2025

    A new Tropical Smoothie Cafe franchisee is opening not one, but two locations this spring — all while keeping her day job and raising twin 4-year-olds. Nikki Vogel is taking over 2,200-square-feet in the former Calibration Brewery building at 119 Armour Road in North Kansas City for a scheduled April 16 opening. (It will be…

    Roster filled: 32 Kansas startups march into Round 2 of tourney-style pitch competition

    By Tommy Felts | March 12, 2025

    WICHITA — Nearly three dozen Sunflower State startups are vying for $20,000 in prize money — and courting the attention of investors — as they advance to the second round of an innovative, state-backed pitch competition set amid the excitement of the NCAA Men’s Basketball Tournament. NXTUS on Tuesday announced the initial 32 companies advancing…

    Randy Wasinger wanted the 1952 Topps of NFTs; so the lifelong baseball card collector started coding (and Mark Cuban came calling)

    By Tommy Felts | March 11, 2025

    Editor’s note: The following includes excerpts from “The Corporate Couch” podcast as part of a collaboration between host Jeff Pelaccio and Startland News to highlight Web3 companies and founders in the space. The 15-year-old boy within Randy Wasinger — so obsessed with baseball cards that he opened a card shop in downtown Russell, Kansas, to sell…

    Kansas legislation banning DeepSeek passes to state Senate after swell of support in House

    By Tommy Felts | March 11, 2025

    Editor’s note: This article was written for a class at the University of Kansas’ William Allen White School of Journalism and Mass Communications and distributed through the Kansas Press Association. TOPEKA — A bill seeking to ban DeepSeek, a Chinese artificial intelligence chatbot, from state devices has advanced in the Kansas Legislature. HB 2313 passed…