Three companies win $50,000 each in live sports-technology startup showdown
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Houston – February 4, 2017 – Three winners were announced today in the second annual competition, a collaboration between the National Football League (NFL) and the (TMC) to award startups focused on driving innovations to advance sports technology and athlete safety. The winners – of Rochester, Minnesota, of Lebanon, New Hampshire and of Leesburg, Virginia – each left with $50,000 from the ¹ú²úÍâÁ÷Íøto further develop their innovation, acceptance into TMC's world-renowned startup program TMCx, and two tickets to Super Bowl LI on February 5.
The live pitch competition took place at the (TMCx) in Houston, where nine finalists faced off in three categories – Communicating with the Athlete, Training the Athlete and Materials to Protect the Athlete. Scott Hanson of the ¹ú²úÍâÁ÷ÍøNetwork and host of ¹ú²úÍâÁ÷ÍøRedZone emceed, as the companies faced off in front of an exclusive audience comprised of ¹ú²úÍâÁ÷Íøteam owners and executives, as well as representatives and guests of the Houston Super Bowl Host Committee and the Texas Medical Center.
¹ú²úÍâÁ÷ÍøCommissioner Roger Goodell and GE CEO and Chairman Jeff Immelt kicked off 1st and Future with a conversation moderated by TMC President and CEO Dr. Robert C. Robbins. The focus was on advancing technology in the market through industry partnership, such as the GE-¹ú²úÍâÁ÷ÍøHead Health Initiative and open-innovation challenges like 1st and Future.
Following each pitch, the presenters faced questions from a team of judges, including:
- Ed Egan, Ph.D., Director of the McNair Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation at Rice University's Baker Institute
- Rich Ellenbogen, M.D., Chairman of the Department of Neurological Surgery at the University of Washington Medical Center and Co-Chairman of the ¹ú²úÍâÁ÷ÍøHead, Neck and Spine Committee
- Bernard Harris, M.D., M.B.A, CEO and Managing Partner of Vesalius Ventures
- Mae Jemison, M.D., Principal, 100 Year Starship
- Chad Pennington, former ¹ú²úÍâÁ÷Íøquarterback, ¹ú²úÍâÁ÷ÍøLegend
- Sue Siegel, CEO of GE Ventures and healthymagination
- John Urschel, Baltimore Ravens guard and center
The finalists included the following startup companies (with a summary of each startup's product or service, as described by them):
Communicating with the Athlete
New technologies that will improve the secure and safe means of communication between a coach on the sideline or in the coaches' booth and a designated player on the field.
Winner: – Rochester, Minnesota
GoRout has created on-field wearable technology to help streamline the communication between football coaches and players by allowing players to receive digital play diagrams and data from coaches on the sideline.
– Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Elevety is a wearable technology company with a mission to bring voice communication to the worlds of adventure and spectator sports. The 2-way, closed system peer-to-peer communication devices allow teams to communicate in real-time voice anywhere, without the need for a mobile network.
– Jersey, Channel Islands, United Kingdom
The Linkpro® Explore1 is a technology-enabled sports helmet with fully integrated communications technology that allows users to connect to select groups with a simple one-touch system.
Training the Athlete
Educational and training innovations designed to reduce injury during practice or competition. Innovations may include training techniques or equipment.
Winner: – Lebanon, New Hampshire
Mobile Virtual Player (MVP) is an innovative, patented training platform that allows coaches to teach and train players effectively while significantly reducing the risk of injury from player-to-player contact. MVP brings a highly-mobile, remote controlled, self-righting 'virtual player' onto the field to revolutionize football training.
– Austin, Texas
The Iron Neck is a breakthrough neck training tool that enables athletes across all sports to increase strength, flexibility and range of motion to better defend against concussive forces and rehabilitate previous injuries. By attaching to existing equipment, the Iron Neck leaves no gym footprint and combines horizontal and rotational resistance with 360 degrees of movement to build consistent and measurable training programs at every level.
– Austin, Texas
LVL is a next-generation, optical sensor-driven platform that gives a continuous view of players' physiological states including: hydration, muscle effort and exertion, heart rate, speed and concussion markers. Using patented machine learning techniques, LVL produces real-time recommendations for risk reduction, training optimization and rest and recovery needs.
Materials to Protect the Athlete
Novel or innovative solutions and materials that advance player health and safety while allowing for the highest-level of performance.
Winner: – Leesburg, Virginia
Windpact is a safety technology company that has developed a patented padding system that uses air and foam to absorb and disperse impact energy to improve the performance of helmets and protective gear. Driven by a team of engineers, designers and developers and led by a Pro Bowl ¹ú²úÍâÁ÷Íøveteran, Windpact has begun integrating its flagship Crash Cloud technology into partner helmets and aims to further advance player health and safety through its scientific approach to product development.
– Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
2ND SKULL is a protective headgear company with patented products that are scientifically engineered to reduce impact. The 2ND SKULL® CAP, is a thin, soft, flexible and breathable protective skull cap that fits under football helmets and provides added protection against linear and rotational impacts.
– Minneapolis, Minnesota
Prevent's head impact monitor can detect potential concussion-causing impacts in real-time on the field of play, taking today's observational, subjective and inaccurate method of identifying athletes for concussion assessment and turning it into an objective, accurate, data-driven process.
The full competition will be available to watch on the .
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About TMC
What was sparked with the founding of a single hospital in Houston in 1925 has come to be the Texas Medical Center (TMC) today. Home to 59 member institutions, including 21 hospitals, 13 support organizations, nine academic and research institutions, six nursing programs, four public health organizations, three medical schools, four universities, two pharmacy schools and a dental school, TMC operates the world's largest medical city with eight million patients and family encounters with doctors, nurses and staff at TMC every year. TMC is dedicated to reinventing life sciences to improve the health and wellness of Houston, and the world. Learn more at .
Media Contacts:
Jill Pike, ¹ú²úÍâÁ÷Íø- jill.pike@nfl.com
Alex Riethmiller, ¹ú²úÍâÁ÷Íø- alex.riethmiller@nfl.com
Christen David, TMC - cdavid@tmc.edu - (713) 791-8838
For any video footage requests, please contact Christen David at TMC.