Toronto Raptors hope technology off the court leads to success on it
TORONTO — Back in the day, a basketball player might sneak into a gym to work on his shot late at night.
Now a Toronto Raptor can do it and have a machine verbally and visually track his shot. And then file it away for future comparison.
The NBA franchise showed off its new multimedia analytic board Tuesday, a giant screen that stretches 37 metres long and three metres high on a wall alongside one of its practice courts at the OVO Athletic Centre.
Comprised of 448 video boards, the massive screen — which required a steel beam to be installed for support — is able to show game or practice footage as well as next-level stats. And thanks to face recognition and eight cameras mounted above each basket, it can track and document a player’s shooting motion, even voicing the numerical arc, depth or straightness of a shot.