Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis Colts Running Back Jonathan Taylor Among Investors In Sports Technology Company Strive’s $6 Million Series A Round
Attempt, a expertise firm primarily targeted on measuring and analyzing muscle information for athletes, has raised $6 million in a Collection A funding spherical.
Future Communities Capital, a Berkeley, Calif., enterprise capital agency, led the spherical, whereas a variety of earlier buyers akin to SeaChange Fund and SeedtoB Capital participated, as properly.
Moreover Future Communities, the brand new buyers included Indianapolis Colts operating again Jonathan Taylor, who led the NFL final yr with 1,811 speeding yards and 18 speeding touchdowns, and Troy Smith, a former NFL quarterback who gained the Heisman Trophy as faculty soccer’s high participant whereas at Ohio State in 2006.
Attempt works with quite a few athletes and groups, together with the NFL’s Baltimore Ravens and Kansas Metropolis Chiefs and the College of Kentucky’s males’s basketball program. The corporate has sensors that may be inserted into compression clothes and monitor muscle exercise to measure fatigue, load symmetry and different variables. The corporate presents a {hardware} and software program platform and helps athletes prepare and keep away from and get better from accidents.
Nikola Mrvaljevic, Attempt’s chief govt and co-founder, wouldn’t disclose the corporate’s valuation. However he claimed it elevated “noticeably” since its final funding spherical and expressed satisfaction with the increase throughout a time up to now few months when enterprise capital buyers are being extra considered with regards to investing in startups. Attempt has now raised a complete of $10.5 million since its founding in 2016. The corporate plans to make use of the most recent funds to extend its employees, which at present sits at about 30 workers; put money into gross sales and advertising efforts; and enhance its platform.
“The (funding) local weather modified slightly bit, for certain, however we have been in a very good place given the momentum and thrilling product that lots of people have been in a position to relate to,” Mrvaljevic stated. “I all the time joke when individuals ask, ‘Who’s your buyer?’, I ask them, ‘Do you run, stroll, cycle, leap? Do you do something outdoors of your chair?’ It makes it slightly extra relatable and simpler for individuals to get behind.”
He added: “The macroeconomic occasions which can be occurring proper now are to an extent affecting all of us whether or not you’re pumping gasoline or shopping for groceries. There was a change however we partnered with some superb buyers who perceive the imaginative and prescient and associated each as buyers and potential clients, which all the time makes me very excited.”
Mrvaljevic conceived of Attempt greater than 20 years in the past when he performed skilled basketball in Montenegro and questioned in regards to the pressure he and his teammates have been placing on their our bodies throughout practices and video games. He moved to america within the early 2000s and earned levels in biomedical engineering and mechanical engineering from the College of Rhode Island.
After graduating, Mrvaljevic labored for a number of years as an engineer at Fluke Corp., a Seattle-area medical system firm. All alongside, he had been occupied with launching a sports activities expertise firm, and in 2016, he took the plunge after sending chilly emails to 48 faculty coaches throughout the U.S. and explaining his purpose of measuring and analyzing information and serving to them enhance efficiency.
“When 42 of them responded and invited me on-site, that’s once I realized I is perhaps on to one thing,” he stated. “That second the place coaches associated to our imaginative and prescient and have been in a position to validate our worth proposition is one thing the place we realized, ‘OK, that is actual.’ I didn’t spend an excessive amount of time, if any, having an inside negotiation with myself whether or not I needed to pursue this product. I used to be very dedicated proper off the bat due to that validation and curiosity from coaches.”
By means of the years, Attempt’s product has developed to the place now the corporate is focusing on the analysis of muscle mass, significantly the glutes, hamstrings and quadriceps. The platform makes use of software program powered by Microsoft’s
MSFT
Whereas most of Attempt’s clients are athletes {and professional} and faculty groups, the corporate additionally works with the army, bodily therapists and manufacturing staff, all of whom want entry to muscle information.
“Our mission all the time is to empower gamers and coaches, and our mission is to be sure that they perceive the information units,” Mrvaljevic stated. “We’re very targeted on ensuring the client, whether or not its an athlete or whether or not it’s a coach or a army operator, that they’re targeted on understanding what’s the information telling them…It’s actually vital for all of us to aspire to digest this information within the easiest and best to grasp phrases. That’s one thing we’re making an attempt to enhance on a continuing foundation.”
Indianapolis, IN
Who Caused Colts’ Loss to Lions? Not Anthony Richardson
Way too often in the NFL, the quarterback receives too much credit for a win and too much of the blame for a loss.
But that is exactly the opposite of what we will be doing today. Anthony Richardson is not the reason the Indianapolis Colts lost to the Detroit Lions, 24-6. Richardson’s supporting cast failed him too many times to count as the offense repeatedly shot themselves in the foot against arguably the best team in the league.
“We lost, so it wasn’t good enough,” Richardson remarked about his performance. “Just got to get back to the drawing board. Like I said, focus on the details and just be better as a whole, not just individual.”
Richardson’s performance was, admittedly, not one to write home about. The quarterback was 11-of-28 (39%) for 172 yards with zero touchdowns or interceptions while adding 61 yards on the ground. But as has been the case for most of the season, the box score does not tell the whole story.
Richardson was under constant duress as the offensive line produced their worst game of the season. According to NFL Next Gen Stats, Richardson was pressured on 46.7% of his dropbacks yesterday. Despite taking zero sacks due to Richardson getting rid of the football or evading the rush, he hardly had any time to deliver the football to his receivers.
The offensive line also had killer penalties that negated big plays or stalled drives. Quenton Nelson, who may have played the worst game of his career, was called for three penalties. Holding calls on Braden Smith and Dalton Tucker eliminated plays of 21 and 19 yards, respectively.
Altogether, the Colts had eight offensive penalties on plays that totaled 98 yards. 79 of those 98 were passing yards on four completions by Richardson. That is a lot of yardage and big plays erased by self-inflicted wounds.
“As a team, it hurts us,” Richardson admitted. “Whenever you’re out there playing a good team like that, you can’t beat yourself and try to beat the other team at the same time. So, the penalties definitely hurt us, but that’s just getting back to the drawing board, just understanding the minor details and discipline between each and every play. Just want to make it work.”
It was not just the offensive line that failed to provide any help. The tight end group was abysmal as Drew Ogletree and Kylen Granson continued to waste opportunities.
Ogletree was called for a hold that negated a 21-yard gain by Granson and then proceeded to drop a wide-open touchdown pass. Granson failed to look for the ball when he was a wide-open hot read and then cut off his route when he was not supposed to, causing two more incompletions.
While the play of the tight ends was as bad as it has been all season, causing the position to become the top need this offseason amongst fans, Richardson tried to take some heat off of Ogletree after the game.
“Just stick with it,” Richardson said when asked what he told Ogletree after the drop. “He’s not going to catch every pass. I’m not going to throw a great ball every time. So, like I said, it’s the nature of the game. Whatever the game throws at you, you’ve got to just adjust and just play ball. He dropped the ball – so what. I don’t throw great passes all the time, so it is what it is. We’re going to get the next one.”
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Combine the disappointments from the offensive line and tight ends with a failure to get Jonathan Taylor going, not getting two feet inbounds on a dime from Richardson to Ashton Dulin, and continued miscommunication from AD Mitchell, the offense was a brutal mess.
Richardson did his best to take the blame after the game and not single anyone out, but the film does not lie. Michael Pittman Jr. (six catches for 96 yards) and Josh Downs (three catches for 27 yards) showed up to help their quarterback, but that was about it. The supporting cast has to be better.
“Just execution, dropped passes, delivery,” Richardson explained. “I could’ve thrown some better passes, especially the one to the left, to JD (Josh Downs) right there. But just execution, no penalties in the red zone and just finishing. We didn’t finish play calls that we did have. We just didn’t execute.”
The failure to execute and undisciplined penalties also falls on the coaching staff. Offensive line coach Tony Sparano Jr. and tight ends coach Tom Manning did not have their groups ready to play on Sunday. But the buck stops with head coach Shane Steichen, who must get his unit better prepared and ready to execute.
“Penalties hurt us. Starts with myself,” Steichen stated. “We’ve got to get those cleaned up. We had a season-high 10 penalties I believe for 75 yards – that’s on me. We can’t have that. We’ve got to play clean football going forward.”
Those who only look at the box score, did not watch the game, or are trying to push a narrative, will say that Richardson’s accuracy issues reared their ugly head yet again and it doomed the Colts. It is the same lazy analysis that the FOX halftime crew, particularly Michael Strahan, put forth at the break.
Those who know ball and watched the game know the group around Richardson failed him. They failed their quarterback by taking away opportunities or failing to convert plays that legitimately could have changed the course of the game. And when playing a team like the Lions, that cannot happen if you hope to win.
“We’ve just got to execute,” Richardson proclaimed. “We knew that was a great team right there, but they didn’t really do anything spectacular to beat us. They played that game the right way and we didn’t go out and execute the way we knew that we were supposed to.
“We let them throw a few penalties on us because (of) our discipline and our details. We’ve just got to keep playing, play complimentary football, keep the details the details, and keep trusting the process and just going out there and trying to find a way to win.”
The difference between a good team like the Lions and a lesser team like the Colts was evident yesterday. One was disciplined, executed, and took advantage of their opportunities. The other could not stop tripping over themselves.
The Colts are now 5-7 and seeing their playoff hopes dwindle by the week as they look more and more like a mediocre team yet again. Since Richardson’s return, he has been one of the few players contributing at a high enough level to win games. But football is a team sport, and one player cannot do it alone when his teammates are failing to hold up their end of the bargain.
Maybe it is time for accountability to be enforced at other positions too, not just the quarterback position.
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Indianapolis, IN
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Indianapolis, IN
NOTEBOOK: Lions embracing road warrior mentality
It’s Thanksgiving in Detroit and that means it’s a short week to get ready for Thursday’s game at Ford Field against the Chicago Bears.
The Lions have some new injuries they are dealing with from the Colts game, though Campbell seemed optimistic about a few of them. Montgomery (shoulder), Decker (knee, ankle), cornerback Carlton Davis III (knee) and wide receiver Kalif Raymond (foot) left the game.
Decker and Montgomery said afterward they could have returned and should be good to go Thursday. Davis was standing on his leg talking to reporters and said it felt pretty good, but imaging would determine more. Campbell seemed more concerned about Raymond’s injury after the game.
“I don’t know Chicago’s deal yet. I don’t know what they’re dealing with, but I’m sure they’ve got injuries,” Campbell said. “Everybody’s got them, and the league doesn’t care. They make the schedule, and we play this and we roll, you know?
“Seven days later we got Green Bay. So be it, man and that’s the way it rolls, and we’ll be ready. We’ll have our unit ready to go Thursday back home, Thanksgiving, division opponent, and we’ll be locked in and ready to roll.”
Detroit hasn’t won on Thanksgiving since 2016, and that’s a streak they are looking to end Thursday.
“We haven’t won on Thanksgiving in a while and that’s something we want to change,” Goff said.
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