Video Storage
Keep every swing, bullpen, and breakdown organized by athlete and date.
Player Development Platform
Centralize video, communication, progress tracking, and player development in one clean system built for coaches who take development seriously.
Mechanical focus, routines, and next actions.
Track sessions, trends, and development markers over time.
01 — Platform Overview
Keep every athlete's video, notes, focus points, and communication in a single clean dashboard so progress never gets lost.
For Coaches
Keep every athlete's video, notes, focus points, and communication in a single clean dashboard so progress does not get lost in texts, camera rolls, or scattered documents.
For Players
Give players a dedicated hub for their clips, feedback, routines, and measurable development so they always know what matters next.
02 — Core Features
Everything follows the same structure: hard hierarchy, athletic typography, controlled spacing, and no extra noise.
Keep every swing, bullpen, and breakdown organized by athlete and date.
Track development focus points over time with structured notes and milestones.
Centralize athlete messaging so coaching stays separate from everyday noise.
Give each athlete a dedicated hub that feels clean, simple, and professional.
Build the foundation for Blast, Trackman, HitTrax, and other development metrics.
Create simple progress summaries that players and parents can understand fast.
03 — Snapshot
Baseline IX is a structured player-development platform. The visuals feel closer to a pro tool than a trendy startup homepage.
Each player has a clear place for video, communication, metrics, and development priorities.
Preserve clips and notes in sequence so coaching patterns and progress actually stay visible.
A direct line between coach and athlete keeps feedback clean and actionable.
Turn clips, notes, and data into updates that are easy to review and understand.
04 — Workflow
Large numeric hierarchy, uppercase headings, light surfaces, and strong green accents without adding anything outside the system.
Step One
Add swings, bullpens, practice footage, or session clips into the athlete's profile.
Step Two
Attach notes, key focus points, and development context so the work has structure.
Step Three
Turn the timeline into an actual system for long-term development and clearer communication.
05 — For Coaches Who Care About Development
The strongest statement on the page: black background, white typography, green action color, and enough restraint that the brand still feels premium and controlled.
Access every player, note, report, and session from one place.
See personal clips, feedback, and current focus areas.
Start with player development. Grow into broader coaching, tracking, and facility workflows later.
Final Call To Action
Tell us about your program and we'll get you set up. We review every request to ensure the best experience.