MONITORING TECHNOLOGIES FOR SPORTS ANALYSIS
The use of technology in the analysis of sports performance has become a usual and necessary practice among professional teams.
The use of technology in the analysis of sports performance has become a usual and necessary practice among professional teams.
In elite football, very few goals are scored. Between 70 and 75% of the matches end up with less than 3 goals.
HomeCourt, an incredibly well-developed app that the NBA has decided to use it for scouting future professionals.
If you enjoy both the game itself and statistics, nothing could be better than combining the two in a career.
The purpose is straightforward: To know all that’s happening with the players on a football pitch.
World-renowned clubs have decided to convert their infrastructure into pioneers of innovation in the field of renewable energies and in reducing their carbon footprint.
Virtual reality, augmented reality and mixed reality are establishing themselves in a society which is becoming ever more accustomed to the use of new technologies for entertainment, consumption or information.
Those who have watched elite football across the last decade, realise that the game is more demanding than ever. This places more emphasis on training methods to prepare players for the rigors of the game.
In November 2018, the Football Technology Innovation department at FIFA and Victoria University, conducted a research study in collaboration with the Barça Innovation Hub at the Mini Estadi, to explore the validity of the Electronic Performance Tracking Systems (EPTS) of 16 different companies.
In the OptaPro Forum this week, Carlos Rodríguez will be presenting a study currently being carried out by the club on the body orientation of players in different game situations. We sat down for a chat with him so that he could give us a brief explanation of the project.