Create a free account, or log in

Aussie sports analysis startup Gameface.AI acquired in $33 million deal

Listed sports equipment company Slinger Bags will acquire the business for a total of almost $33 million.
Stephanie Palmer-Derrien
Stephanie Palmer-Derrien
Gameface.AI-sports-startup
Gameface.AI co-founders Jalal Shaik and James Melvin Ebenezer. Source: supplied.

Aussie AI sport analytics startup Gameface.AI has been acquired by listed sports equipment giant Slinger Bags, in a deal worth almost $33 million.

Founded in 2015 by Jalal Shaik and James Melvin Ebenezer, Gameface.AI uses AI and machine learning technology to instantly analyse footage of sports, providing insights and analysis on a match or performance.

A graduate of the Startmate accelerator in 2017, Gameface.AI currently caters to soccer, cricket and basketball, and has partnered with Cricket Australia to provide in-game tracking.

Slinger will acquire 100% of the business in exchange for 6.6 million shares of Slingerโ€™s common stock, plus up to US$3.5 million ($4.8 million) subject to earning considerations.

In total, the transaction values Gameface.AI at US$24 million ($32.9 million).

Gameface.AI co-founder and chief executive Jalal Shaik said he is โ€œthrilledโ€ with the acquisition.

โ€œWhen we first started, we did not plan to build AI for sports analytics,โ€ he tells SmartCompany.

โ€œIt was more of a media, entertainment and shopping app.

After pitching every VC and investor he could get onto, he finally secured a small amount of funding, and honed the product offering, he explains.

โ€œFrom then on we believed we could make something in the sports analytics space. We were in a very niche industry and especially when AI was just getting started.โ€

With โ€œa bit of luckโ€ and word of mouth spreading through the sporting community, the business has been seeing โ€œsteady progressโ€ Shaik says.

โ€œWe did not raise a lot of money, and we ran a very lean team.

โ€œAll the credit goes to my amazing team who sacrificed cushy jobs and took huge pay cuts to get this far. Perseverance and persistence finally paid off.โ€

Since it was founded in 2015, the startup has been solely focused on finding new uses for AI in sports technology, Shaik explained in a statement.

The deal will allow the business to scale more quickly, and reach new customers and audiences.

โ€œSlinger will now take what we have built to new levels and help us expand to meet the huge growth opportunities we see ahead,โ€ he said.

โ€œWe believe that every athlete or coach should have access to high performance analytics that are relevant and meaningful to them. The time is now for the democratisation of high-performance coaching.โ€

Gameface.AI has already developed the AI capabilities for Slingerโ€™s soon-to-be-released app, offering instant analysis of playersโ€™ techniques and offering technical and tactical insights and tips.

โ€œWe have been so impressed with the technology expertise and software development capabilities of the Gameface.AI team as part of their involvement in building out our Slinger app,โ€ Slinger chief executive Mike Ballardie said in a statement.

Now, the business plans to build AI tech into some of its other software products for other sports.

โ€œGameface.AIโ€™s core capabilities are delivered through any camera or phone, which allows us to build consumer-friendly and scalable solutions for the sports market,โ€ Ballardie added.