Orreco is a sports tech company that uses sports science and data-led tools to enhance elite athlete performance. The company’s clients are global and include high performing individual sportspeople as well as Premier League teams in the UK and NFL and NBA teams in the US.
“Our aim is to help the best athletes on the planet to optimise their performance, accelerate recovery where injury or illness occurs and prolong their careers,” says Colin Morrissey, VP for sales and marketing.
“Orreco unlocks the power of athlete’s data and turns it into knowledge which can be used to get results, but also to provide advance warning of illness and injury risk in order to sustain peak performance.”
Morrissey adds that in elite sport it’s all about performance margins and the key to understanding what makes a margin is measurable results in real time on which actionable insights can be based.
Markets in Vienna or Christmas at The Shelbourne? 10 holiday escapes over the festive season
Stealth sackings: why do employers fire staff for minor misdemeanours?
Michael Harding: I went to the cinema to see Small Things Like These. By the time I emerged I had concluded the film was crap
Look inside: 1950s bungalow transformed into modern five-bed home in Greystones for €1.15m
Orreco makes this happen through te@m which uses a combination of advanced machine learning, blood biomarker data and a range of other inputs such as wellness and sleep metrics, travel and game schedules and performance statistics to deliver personalised training, nutrition and recovery strategies for teams across all professional sports. There is also a programme within te@m which is specifically aimed at female athletes and coaches and linked to the company’s FitrWoman app.
The te@m platform has a number of modules which teams can tap into as required such as the Recovery Lab (recovery management) and Biomarkers 3.0 which provides advanced biomarker analysis.
Orreco is an Irish Times Innovation awards finalist in the IT & Fintech category sponsored by Mason Hayes Curran