How it works
From intake to an approved plan.
Every step keeps a coach in the loop. Software organizes information and drafts options, but a coach reviews and approves every observation and plan before it reaches you.
The intake and dashboards shown here are demonstrations — a static pilot prototype that doesn't submit, store, or upload real athlete information.
The pipeline
Five stages, one chain of custody.
- 1IntakeYou share history, schedule, and video.
- 2Coach reviewA coach studies your information.
- 3Plan draftedPriorities and options organized.
- 4Coach approvesThe coach confirms the plan.
- 5DeliveredIt appears on your dashboard.
You complete the intake
Age, level, height and weight, throwing and game schedule, current velocity, pitch mix, training history, any pain or injury, available equipment, and your goals — plus throwing and movement-screen video. In this prototype the intake is a mockup: nothing is submitted, stored, or uploaded.
A coach reviews everything
The coach reviews your intake and video. The platform organizes your answers and may surface possible patterns to look at — but these are starting points for the coach, not conclusions. If you reported pain, the coach pauses programming and refers you to a qualified medical professional first.
Your plan is drafted
The coach sets your development priorities and assembles a throwing plan and mechanics review, with strength, mobility, and arm-care guidance. Any software-generated draft is clearly labelled and is never sent to you as-is.
The coach approves it
Nothing is marked "approved" until the coach confirms it. The coach edits the draft, checks it against your intake and any pain disclosure, and only then approves it for delivery — recorded with a name and date.
Delivered, then reassessed
The approved plan appears on your dashboard. You follow it and record how it's going. The coach reviews your progress and approves an updated plan — and the cycle repeats.
Why coach-led, not automated
Pitching development affects a young athlete's body and long-term health. Software can organize information and speed up the busywork, but a coach should own the decisions — not software. That is why a coach reviews and approves every plan, and why we never present uncertain observations as facts.
See a coach-approved plan
The sample report shows what a delivered, coach-approved plan looks like — fictional demo data only.