
Sportbot reaches clay courts in Monaco
Sportbot’s Monaco clay-court appearance marked a long step from early prototypes to real premium training environments.

The 2026 innovation recognition highlights Sportbot’s moving-machine approach and the engineering work behind more realistic tennis training.
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Sportbot’s Monaco clay-court appearance marked a long step from early prototypes to real premium training environments.

Fans at the Lexus Ilkley Open could step in, hit balls, test accuracy, and experience Sportbot between matches.

The 2026 innovation recognition highlighted Sportbot’s moving-machine approach and the engineering behind more realistic tennis training.

Sportbot presented its moving training-partner concept to founders and executives at Kongres Podjetništva in Portorož.

A professional padel coach tested Sportbot over multiple sessions, focusing feedback on movement, timing, recovery, and precision.

Sportbot’s tennis-and-padel direction gives coaches and clubs one moving training platform across two court formats.

The Sportbot app added shot and movement calibration, plus automatic tennis-or-padel setup for newer firmware versions.

Mesto Akrobatov traced Sportbot’s path from a first moving prototype to padel expansion and early products reaching America.

At RX Summit 2025 in Brussels, coaches could test Sportbot and see the product’s video-analysis direction.

The LPT interview framed Sportbot as a coach-first training tool, not a replacement for coaches.

Sportbot joined the Connect2Slovenia 2025 matchmaking event in Celje as a Slovenian startup with a moving tennis ball machine.

Public Sportbot updates in 2025 helped make the moving ball-machine concept easier for tennis audiences to understand.
