Kitman Labs secures nearly €500,000 from Sony’s venture arm

Irish sports science company has raised over $20m to date as it continues to grow

Kitman Labs client Chelsea in action against Arsenal recently
Kitman Labs client Chelsea in action against Arsenal recently

Irish sports tech company Kitman Labs has secured close to €500,000 in investment from Japanese consumer electronics giant Sony.

The investment was made via the group’s corporate venture arm, Sony Innovation Fund. No financial details of the investment have been disclosed but company documents recently filed in Dublin show the Japanese company invested €439,044 in Kitman.

The Dublin-headquartered company is a firm working to reduce the risk of injury within professional sports. It uses artificial intelligence and data science to improve athletes’ health, welfare and performance.

Founded in 2012 by Stephen Smith and Iarfhlaith Kelly, the company has raised over $20 million to date. This includes €5.1 million in funding raised late last year from backers that include Blue Run Ventures, Peter Kight, a senior advisor at Comvest Partners.

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Ex-Paddy Power chief executive and now Bank of Ireland chairman Patrick Kennedy also backed the company in that round as did the bookie's co-founder Stewart Kennedy. Their former colleague, Andrew Algeo who now heads up the National Lottery is another investor as is the Lottery's chairman Pádraig Ó Ríordáin, former rugby international Jamie Heaslip, and his father-in-law, businessman Oisin O'Buachalla.

Acquisition

Kitman's technology is used by 150 elite sports teams across the NFL, NHL, MLB, UFC, NCAA, English Premier League, Bundesliga, Pro14, Premiership Rugby, NRL, Chinese Super League and more. Among the individual teams the Irish company counts as clients are Chelsea, LA Galaxy and Bayer Leverkusen.

The company last month made its first acquisition, snapping up English athlete data management company The Sports Office for an undisclosed sum. It also recently announced plans to double staff numbers from 44 to 88 people with most of those new roles based at its innovation centre in Dublin.

Kitman, which does not disclose turnover, said late last year it had more than doubled new sales and annual recurring revenues in 2019. Kitman booked a €3.3 million loss in 2018 to bring accumulated losses to almost €13 million.

The Sony Innovation Fund was launched in 2016 and has made over 40 investments to date.

"Kitman Labs is at the nexus of artificial intelligence, sports science, and human performance. Their unique approach to technology and the customer experience has set a new standard in the elite, college, and youth sports markets," said Gen Tsuchikawa, chief investment officer of the fund.

“We love to work with companies that embrace the spirit of innovation, and are thrilled that this investment marks our entrance into the dynamic field of sports tech,” he added.

Charlie Taylor

Charlie Taylor

Charlie Taylor is a former Irish Times business journalist