News

The Daily Iowan · April 7, 2026

Daily Iowan covers Stridelane's affordable pacing technology business.

The student newsroom profiled Carson Lane's move from Iowa track athlete to founder of a company bringing LED pacing lights to more meets and training environments.

Stridelane lights guiding runners around an indoor track

Article summary

The Daily Iowan story frames Stridelane as both an athlete-built product and an accessibility play for track programs. It explains how Carson Lane built a pacing-light system that displays target pace around the track, giving runners a visible reference instead of relying only on split calls or feel.

The article also highlights the business case: Stridelane is positioned as a more affordable alternative to elite-level pacing systems, with rental and purchase options designed for schools, meet directors, and teams that want professional pacing feedback without world-championship budgets.

The piece notes early meet momentum, including Stridelane's debut at the Jimmy Grant Alumni Invitational and later use at the Bearcat Invite, while connecting the technology to athlete performance, meet atmosphere, and Lane's broader plans for product expansion.

Why it matters

For meet directors, the coverage reinforces Stridelane's core promise: pacing lights can elevate the event experience without asking the host staff to operate another complicated system.

For coaches and athletes, it shows the practical value of real-time visual pacing. Runners can chase a precise target around the track, and coaches can create more intentional race and training environments.

Read the original coverage

The original article was written by Kate Blodig for The Daily Iowan. The source headline uses the spelling “Strideline”; this site uses the current brand spelling, Stridelane.

Open Daily Iowan article