Interviews

Meet the movers, shakers, and innovators who are building the future of sports

Interviews

You can wear your favorite player's jersey. You can watch games live with other fans at a local team bar. You can even spend your weekly paycheck betting on your
Lionel Messi scored the game-winning goal in his Inter Miami debut. Lebron James had an iconic block on Andre Iguodala in Game 7 of the 2016 NBA Finals. These are
With Finlete, that's now a reality. Fans have always had deep personal ties to their favorite athletes and teams. This revolutionary platform now gives them a vested interest in the
By 2030, it will double in size. Why? Sports events are one of the few places where you can capture a lot of attention at once. And companies will spend
But some people have been behind the scenes building it for years. Don White is one of them. Since 2016, Satifi Labs has been unlocking the power of proprietary brand
From blogs to social media and now content creators, hundreds of people and brands have come and gone.
NFL Wide Receiver. Executive coach and financial advisor. Educator and professor. And now an investment manager.
But what if you didn't need any to build an empire? That's what Ben Borton and David Silberman have figured out. In 2019, David and co-founders
He had no prior business experience, no high-level connections, and zero backers. 6 years later Blue Wire is a multi-million dollar company and one of the premier sports podcasting networks.
Valtteri Salomaki is looking to change that. Although he doesn't come from a sports or athletic background, he's taking sports venues and arenas by storm with this new, revolutionary fan
And so is building a successful tech startup. Matt Rum has done both. After playing his college ball at William & Mary and then professionally
But that didn't stop him from building a company around his passion for golf. Noticing a gap in the golf tech market, he dove headfirst into designing and developing a