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For Coaches & Teams

If you review other riders — as a coach, a team manager, or a few friends sharing footage — this is the path for you. The core analysis workflow is the same as for solo riders; what's different is that multiple people contribute runs, and one shared reference run is the canonical pass for the whole group.

Where to start

If you've never set up a team before, do the Quickstart. It walks you through creating a team, inviting riders, and getting to your first cross-rider comparison.

After that, the rest of this section is task-by-task:

  • Inviting riders — how to add athletes to a team and manage who has access.
  • Reviewing an athlete — how to read a session that contains runs from multiple riders and give specific feedback.

What a team gives you

  • a shared workspace where multiple riders' runs sit side by side
  • one reference run per track session that everyone in the team compares against, so feedback is grounded in the same line
  • visibility into every team member's runs on a shared track without asking them to send you files

How a team is structured

A team is a group of riders who share track sessions. A track session inside a team can include runs uploaded by anyone in the team. Each session has one reference run that everyone is compared against — that's the bit that makes a team session different from a collection of solo notebooks.

If you want a fuller picture of the moving parts, see Track session and Reference run.

A practical note on identity

The name on a run is the rider in the video, not necessarily the person who uploaded it. A coach uploading footage on behalf of an athlete will tag the run with the athlete's name — that's what shows up on the leaderboard and in the comparison. This matters most for teams where one phone might be uploading on behalf of several riders.

If you're stuck, the FAQ covers the most common questions and the Concepts pages define every term.