Pennant runs the records, athlete profiles, schedules, parent communications, and AD documents for every team at your school. Branded as your school. Built by a coach.
Every sport, every coach, every season stitched together from a different stack of tools that were never built to talk to each other. The AD ends up as the spreadsheet manager, the coaches end up as the IT department, and the parents end up last to know.
Athletic.net for track. MaxPreps for football. A free scheduling site for basketball. None of them know about each other, and none look like your school.
Records on a Google sheet. Schedules in a group text. Physicals in a folder on the AD's desktop. Every season the system gets rebuilt by whoever has time.
The athletics page on the school website hasn't been updated in two seasons because no coach has the password and nobody can reach the district webmaster.
Every team. Every roster. Every record. Every schedule. Every form the AD has to chase before the season starts. All on one platform that looks like your school, not like a software product.
All-time top-N, top-25 by grade, lifetime PR tracking. Track, swimming, wrestling, basketball — every sport that keeps a record book.
Multi-sport rosters. Every PR, every stat, every season under one bio. The page a college coach actually looks at when a parent shares the link.
Every game, match, and meet for every team on one calendar. Score updates from the sideline. Parents stop asking the coach what time it is.
Group messaging by team, sport, or school-wide. Parent portal with their kid's schedule, stats, and absences in one view.
Physicals, waivers, code of conduct, eligibility forms. Upload once, track per athlete, expire and renew automatically. The AD stops chasing paperwork.
yourschoolname.com, not your-school.someplatform.com. Custom domain, your colors, your logo, your mascot. Pennant disappears.
"Every feature in Pennant exists because a coach or an athletic director told me they needed it. None of it is theoretical."
Pennant grew out of a real high school athletic program in Arizona that was tired of stitching together Athletic.net, Google Sheets, and a static school page nobody could edit.
Every feature ships into a real team's hands before it ships to anyone else. If it doesn't pass the coach test, it doesn't go in.
Pennant is in pilot with a working high school athletic program in Arizona. We're opening to the next group of schools now. If you're a coach or an AD and want in, we want to hear from you.
One athletic department. One platform. Every team, every season.
Built for the AD who is done managing spreadsheets and group texts.
Branded as your school. Hosted on your domain. The platform gets out of the way.
Fifteen minutes. We will show you what your school's athletic site would look like on Pennant.
Schedule a demo