eonsportsvr

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  • USA Today Sports

    University of Miami's sports VR app goes behind the scenes

    by 
    Timothy J. Seppala
    Timothy J. Seppala
    08.04.2016

    The Olympics aren't the only sports-in-VR news this week -- college athletics will take the (virtual) field too. In conjunction with the University of Miami, EON Sports VR is starting a VR channel showcasing the school's sports teams. Previously, EON has brought VR to baseball and football training. Men's and women's scrimmages, practice footage and huddles will be accessible via a $30 Hurricane-branded headset, according to a prepared statement.

  • Associated Press

    Major League Baseball team uses VR for batting practice

    by 
    Edgar Alvarez
    Edgar Alvarez
    04.07.2016

    Virtual reality made its way into the NFL last year, when the Dallas Cowboys became the first team in the league to use the technology for training. Now, on the Major League Baseball side, a similar path is being followed by the Tampa Bay Rays. The team has started utilizing a simulator from EON Sports VR known as iCube, which lets players step inside a virtual batting cage and practice their swing. Coaches are fans of this method because it takes less physical wear on an individual, plus it allows batters to experience throws that mimic those of pitchers across MLB -- like Giants' own Madison Bumgarner.

  • A virtual baseball simulator could change how hitters train

    by 
    Edgar Alvarez
    Edgar Alvarez
    01.07.2016

    EON Sports VR is on a mission to change sports training as we know it. The young, Kansas City-based startup recently teamed up with retired MLB player Jason Giambi on Project OPS, a virtual reality baseball trainer powered by a consumer headset. But that's not the only novelty EON Sports VR has been working on. Last June, it teased an interactive baseball hitting simulator, one that allows players to step into a virtual batting cage and practice their swing. Today, at CES 2016, I had the chance to try it.

  • Jason Giambi bets on virtual reality to train better batters

    by 
    Edgar Alvarez
    Edgar Alvarez
    11.16.2015

    Virtual reality has made substantial strides in gaming and entertainment, but there's another area where the technology could also prove useful: sports training. Kansas City-based EON Sports VR has been working on interactive simulators for football and, now, it's tackling baseball. Its latest, Project OPS, uses custom software and a smartphone-powered SIDEKIQ VR headset to train batters on strike zone awareness and pitch recognition through real-time, 360-degree video challenges. And to give this a sense of credibility, the startup recruited Jason Giambi, a 20-year MLB veteran with an American League MVP title, two Silver Slugger Awards and five All-Star badges under his belt.