How this wearable AI technology is helping NBA, NHL and athletes everywhere prevent injuries |
How this wearable AI technology is helping NBA, NHL and athletes everywhere prevent injuries
Data gathered by Plantiga, an AI-powered platform, helps NHL team captain Gabriel Landeskog stay ahead of new injuries.
Colorado Avalanche left wing Gabriel Landeskog, left, checks Vegas Golden Knights center Jack Eichel during the second period in Game 1 of the Western Conference finals NHL hockey Stanley Cup playoff series Wednesday, May 20, 2026, in Denver. [Photo: David Zalubowski/AP Photo]
Gabriel Landeskog wears the small sensors in the insoles of his skates for practices and games. He wears them in his sneakers when he’s training and, maybe most handy of all, while taking his dog for a walk.Those spins around the block and ice record all of his biomechanical measurements. The numbers provided a blueprint in helping the Colorado Avalanche captain resume his career after a three-year gap caused by a complicated knee injury. Now, they keep him at his gritty, goal-scoring best.The collected data ranges from movement patterns to his asymmetry and whether he’s favoring his surgically repaired right knee. It calculates in-game/in-practice workloads, stride characteristics, and the mechanics of how his feet interact with various surfaces—ground or ice.The details paint a picture to inform Landeskog when he’s reaching maximum capacity and needs a break. That way, the technology prevents him from reaching overexertion levels in training that might set him back for days, possibly weeks.“This detects any red flags before I even feel them,” said Landeskog, whose team trails Vegas 3-0 in a Western Conference Final in which he has two of the Avalanche’s six goals. “It’s been super important for me, and a........