Your team needs more than a group text
Practice schedules, snack sign-ups, game day recaps, and equipment tracking — one website the whole team actually checks.
Start Free Browse all site types →What this team site does
Start from the type of site you actually need, then turn on the pieces that fit the way your team works.
Give people one clear place to understand the team, find the next event or resource, and take the next useful step.
Use the modules that make sense for players: calendars, files, messages, tasks, resources, updates, RSVPs, or shared records.
The first questions should fit this site type, so a team is not pushed through a generic form built for a totally different use.
Build the first version around the real work
Start with participation. A team, club, troop, band, or fitness group needs a public explanation for newcomers and a private place for the people already involved. The first version should keep dates, resources, duties, and updates close together.
Set up first
- Start with roster, practice schedule, snack rotation, game dates, equipment notes, and parent communication.
- Separate coach updates from general team encouragement.
- Add tournament or travel documents when the season requires them.
- Use recaps and photos to keep the site alive between games.
What the page needs to prove
A first-time visitor should see the group identity, schedule shape, participation path, and resource expectations. Returning members should find the practical things quickly: what is next, what to bring, what changed, and where to post an update.
- Roster and parent access
- Practice and game schedule clarity
- Snack and duty rotation examples
- Equipment or tournament logistics
Free should get the season, meeting cycle, or project started. Paid upgrades fit once the group needs more storage, domain polish, email, larger media archives, or heavier scheduling and member-management workflows.
Before you share the site, read it like a new visitor would. The public page should explain who this team is for, what someone can do next, and why the selected tools fit the situation. The private side should already have a useful starting place for players so the site does not feel like an empty shell after signup.
That first-pass clarity matters for conversion and search. People are more likely to keep going when the page matches their actual need, and crawlers get cleaner signals when the headings, examples, internal links, and calls to action all point to the same purpose. Start free, make the site useful, then upgrade only when the team needs more capacity or polish. The first version should feel complete enough that someone can understand it, join it, and come back to it.
Sound familiar?
These are the moments that usually mean a dedicated team site will help.
The group text is chaos
Practice changes, snack sign-ups, and game updates all in one endless thread nobody reads.
Snack rotation drama
Whose turn is it? Nobody remembers. The same parent brings oranges every week.
Equipment goes missing
Cones, pinnies, first aid kit. Nobody knows who has what or when it’s coming back.
Everything your team needs
One private website. No ads. No data mining. You own your data.
Team Schedule
Practices, games, tournaments. Recurring events with location and time.
Snack Rotation
Fair rotation. Parents sign up. Everyone knows whose turn it is.
Game Recaps
Scores, highlights, player spotlights. Build team spirit.
Equipment Tracking
Who has the cones? When’s the jersey wash? Track it all.
Nutrition Plans
Pre-game meals, hydration guides, recovery snacks. Keep athletes fueled.
Fundraiser Tracking
Tournament fees, uniform fund, team goals with progress bars.
Up and running in minutes
No credit card. No setup fees. No catch.
Pick your type
30 seconds. Tell us your team name.
Add your people
Invite players with a link or email.
Start using it
Calendar, tasks, feed, vault — all ready.
Simple pricing
Because coaches have enough to worry about.
Free First Season
- Unlimited players and parents
- Full team schedule
- Snack and duty rotation
- Game recaps and updates
- Equipment tracking
- Nutrition guides
- Fundraiser goals
- Team document vault
- Team games and challenges
- 500 MB storage
Questions?
Is this free?
Free for your first season. After that, just $9/month or $79/season to keep your team site running.
Can parents see the schedule?
Parents get their own access. They see the schedule, snack rotation, and team updates.
Does it work for travel teams?
Yes. Tournament schedules, hotel info in the vault, and carpool coordination all built in.
Can coaches manage the roster?
Coaches have full admin access. Players and parents get appropriate permission levels.
