Key Takeaways
- Sports Replay Now (SRN) launches a performance video platform priced at $159.99/year with no tiered pricing or hidden fees
- The platform offers 1,480 hours of 4K/60fps storage, equivalent to roughly 600 full game films
- SRN owns its hardware infrastructure, bypassing cloud storage costs that competitors typically pass to customers
- Athletes and parents access film via shared link or QR code with no login required
- The platform is sport-agnostic, covering play tagging, custom stat tracking, highlight reels, and coaching diagrams
What SRN Offers at a Single Price Point
Sports Replay Now, a Los Angeles-based startup, launched nationally on April 8, 2026, with a flat-rate performance intelligence platform aimed squarely at the youth, high school, and club market. The product includes 4K/60fps video upload, real-time play tagging, custom stat tables, coaching diagram overlays, and a built-in highlight reel maker. All features ship at one price: $159.99 per year.
“The difference between a good and great performance ecosystem is where coaches, parents, and athletes all operate with the same visual truth,” said Aaron Casillas, SRN Co-Founder and Chief Product Officer.
The company says it owns its hardware infrastructure rather than relying on third-party cloud providers, which it credits for keeping the annual price low relative to legacy competitors.
Why the Access Model Matters for Youth Programs
Film study has historically been gated by cost and complexity. Enterprise-level platforms from Hudl and others serve college and professional programs effectively, but pricing and feature tiers have often left underfunded youth and club programs on the outside. SRN’s pitch is straightforward: one price, all features, no login friction for athletes or parents who need to view film.
The QR code and link-based sharing model is a deliberate design choice. It removes the onboarding step that can slow adoption across rosters with varying levels of tech comfort, a real barrier in youth sports where parent engagement varies widely.
The Competitive Landscape to Watch
SRN enters a market where Hudl remains the dominant incumbent, particularly in high school and college. Whether SRN can convert coaches who are already embedded in existing ecosystems will depend on migration ease, reliability at scale, and whether the hardware-owned storage model holds up as the user base grows. The company does offer migration support for teams switching from other platforms, which signals awareness of the switching-cost challenge.
For league operators and club directors evaluating technology budgets, SRN represents a new data point in the cost-per-team equation, particularly for organizations running dozens of teams across multiple age groups and sports.
Source: ACCESS Newswire, April 8, 2026
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