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Play it forward: sport teams with AI for the win
Min Read

Play it forward: sport teams with AI for the win

Meera Shararth Chandra
4 August, 2025
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Following 3 x Paralympic Champion, Charlotte Henshaw MBE PLY's visit to Geneva to sit on a UN Sport For Good AI session we wanted to continue with fresh AI insight from one of India's most fearless female entrepreneurs, The Tigress herself, Meera Sharath Chandra.

Sport has always had the power to unite, inspire, and transform lives. Now, with the rise of Artificial Intelligence, that power is being expanded in unprecedented ways.

No longer confined to professional competition or commercial advantage, AI is becoming a key partner in reshaping the sector as an influential platform and a force for good.

From widening participation and breaking down barriers, to enabling far-reaching social programmes and promoting emotional resilience, AI is helping to unlock deeper purpose.

At the intersection of innovation and intention lies a new vision: one where technology serves humanity through the universal language of play.

Access & Inclusion

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One of the most promising applications of AI is extending opportunity to underrepresented and marginalised communities. AI-powered platforms can deliver virtual coaching, adaptive training, and real-time translation services to athletes and fans – regardless of geography, language, or ability. This helps bridge the gap between elite performance and grassroots engagement.

For the differently abled, AI-driven technologies such as voice-activated assistants, sensory feedback devices, and intelligent prosthetics are opening up new possibilities for both participating and spectating. These innovations help ensure that the game is truly for all – removing physical, economic, and cultural barriers that have long limited inclusion.

Community and grassroots initiatives

 

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AI is also being used to amplify the effect of local engagement drives. Community organisations and NGOs can leverage data analysis to identify underserved populations, monitor activity, and measure the results of youth-focused schemes, after-school sessions, and peace-building efforts.
Now, AI can track attendance, involvement levels, and academic progress of students involved in these programmes, helping refine efforts and secure continued funding. By enabling smarter curriculum design and evaluation, AI strengthens the case for play as a vehicle for collective progress and long-lasting outcomes.
Mental health and wellbeing

 

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Psychological support in this field is finally gaining the attention it deserves, and AI is contributing solutions. Tech-powered chatbots and virtual counsellors provide discreet support for athletes dealing with stress, anxiety, or burnout. These tools can offer round-the-clock assistance while reducing the stigma often associated with seeking help.

Beyond specialist competitors, community-based apps and wellness platforms use AI to promote holistic wellbeing among youth and amateur players. They provide personalised activity recommendations, monitor stress through wearable data, and even detect early signs of distress. This proactive approach makes support more accessible and integrated into everyday participation.

Fairness and ethics
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AI is also helping identify and correct systemic inequities. By analysing data across gender, race, geography, and funding, AI tools can spotlight disparities in participation rates, pay, resource allocation, and media coverage. This equips organisations and policymakers to take targeted action to close those gaps.

Moreover, AI is being developed to scrutinise ethics and fairness in competitions – detecting doping, match-fixing, or discriminatory behaviour in real time. These innovations help preserve integrity while reinforcing values of justice, transparency, and respect.

Advocacy and sustainability
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AI is increasingly a backbone for sport-based awareness campaigns that tackle global challenges. Whether promoting gender equality, climate action, or refugee inclusion, AI helps collect and visualise evidence-led data that informs action and policy response. This supports organisations in demonstrating their larger contribution and accountability.

In sustainability efforts, AI helps manage energy use in stadiums, reduce waste, and track carbon footprints of teams and events. These insights allow clubs to meet environmental goals and become leaders in the broader sustainability movement, proving that sport can contribute meaningfully to global priorities and agendas.

NOTE: this article has been re-published on the AMG website thanks to the kind permission of The Tigress Tigress CEO herself, Meera Sharath Chandra.  We are both part of the Mission Hubs network.
Looking for an initial conversation on how AI can reframe the role of sport, especially when it comes to brand purpose? Searching for a new revenue stream or branding niche? Happy to have a roam through the category and terrain with you. It’s not a wilderness if you know where to find her: meera@tigresstigress.com
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