Sportlight Technology
Sportlight is a UK‑based sports‑tech company specialising in high‑precision athlete tracking and performance analytics. Instead of relying solely on traditional video or wearable systems, Sportlight uses a combination of LiDAR (laser‑based ranging) and AI/computer‑vision to track players, create detailed data about movement, load, and tactical behaviour — primarily for professional clubs, leagues, and performance teams.
Functions
- LiDAR‑based player and movement tracking — captures detailed positional and movement data for all players on the field with high accuracy, without requiring wearable sensors.
- Performance monitoring & load analysis — tracks physical metrics (speed, acceleration, distance, movement patterns) to assess workload, fatigue risk, and overall performance trends.
- Tactical & spatial analytics — provides data-driven tactical insights: positioning, player spacing, spatial control, team shape, and tactical behaviour over time.
- Automated event detection & video/data overlay — can identify events (e.g. sprints, duels, positioning phases) and link them to video or data for easier review by coaches and analysts.
- Cross‑sport & multi‑environment adaptability — while rooted in football (soccer), the technology has been or is being adapted for other sports (e.g. ice hockey) thanks to its flexibility and ability to track in different conditions.
- Support for elite and professional usage — used by top‑level clubs and leagues, providing data that supports performance analysis, scouting, coaching, and long‑term athlete development.
Advantages
- High accuracy and comprehensiveness — LiDAR + AI gives more precise and detailed data than many wearable or camera‑only systems, enabling deep insights into physical load, movement patterns, and tactical behaviour.
- Non‑intrusive tracking — because it doesn’t rely on wearables, athletes don’t have to wear sensors
- the system is passive and doesn’t interfere with performance or comfort.
- Versatile and scalable — suitable for elite pro clubs, leagues, and potentially for other sports or competition levels
- easier to install in stadiums or arenas than multi‑camera or wearable‑heavy setups.
- Data-driven decision‑making support — helps coaches, performance staff, scouts and analysts make informed decisions on training load, injury risk, tactics, and talent development.
- Broad applicability — beyond performance, the data can serve for tactical analysis, broadcast enhancement, scouting, and long-term monitoring of players and teams.
Disadvantages
- Cost and complexity — installing LiDAR and AI‑driven infrastructure likely requires significant investment, limiting accessibility for smaller clubs or amateur teams.
- Dependence on environment and setup — system must be properly installed (stadium/arena, positioning, calibration) for optimal performance
- poor setup or bad conditions might degrade data quality.
- High data volume & analysis demand — rich data output requires skilled analysts or staff to interpret
- clubs without analytics resources may struggle to utilize full potential.
- Not yet widespread outside elite level — because of cost and infrastructure needs, the benefits are mostly available to professional clubs
- grassroots or smaller organizations may not benefit.
- Potential privacy or regulatory concerns — as with any tracking system, there may be data‑privacy, consent, or regulatory issues depending on jurisdiction and data use.
