Sporting Club

Sporting Club,[1] formerly "OnGoal, LLC", is a group of Kansas City investors that owns or represents a portfolio of athletic organizations under the Sporting Club umbrella. Its flagship property is Major League Soccer franchise Sporting Kansas City.

Sporting Club's logo

Sporting Club consists of five principals: Clifford Illig (co-founder and vice-chairman of the Cerner board), Pat Curran (founder of C3 Holdings), Greg Maday (CEO of SpecChem), Robb Heineman (CEO of Sporting Club), and Neal Patterson (CEO and co-founder of the Cerner Corporation) who died in 2017.[2]

Sporting Kansas City

On August 31, 2006, Sporting Club bought the Wizards from their previous owner, Lamar Hunt, for about $20 million. In June 2007, Sporting Club opened a world-class training center at Swope Soccer Village. The training facility was developed through a public-private partnership between the Kansas City Parks and Recreation Department and Sporting Club.[3] In December 2007, Sporting Club received approval for approximately $275 million of public financing to create a soccer-specific stadium in Kansas City, Kansas.

Swope Park Rangers

In October 2015, the club announced the formation of Swope Park Rangers, a United Soccer League club serving as the senior team's reserve squad.[4]

Sporting Kansas City Academy Youth Development Program

The Sporting KC Academy was formed in 2007, and the development program consists of six teams: U12s, U13s, U14s, U15s, U17s, and U19s. The U15s, U17s, & U19s teams compete as members of the U.S. Soccer Development Academy. SKC academy players have the opportunity to eventually join the Sporting Kansas City first team without going through the MLS draft process. SKC academy home games are played at the Sporting Club Training Center.

The club maintains the Sporting Club Network, with clubs in Missouri, Tennessee, Kansas, Nebraska, Iowa, and Arkansas.[5]

Interest in Everton

In October 2015, the club was linked to a potential purchase of Barclays Premier League club Everton F.C. for $347 million.[6] Heineman addressed these rumors and confirmed that they had been interested in buying Everton and explored it in August but never entered serious talks to buy. Heineman didn't rule out the prospect of a future takeover of a Premier League club.

gollark: I might actually start eventually™ cryptographically signing the updates, wouldn't that be COOL and FUN?
gollark: No, the build system is a mess of shellscripts, a small amount of perl, a node.js program for Lua bundling, and a python script which generates the manifests/hash stuff.
gollark: Anyway, this should allow a working potatoOS™ install to be shipped as only threeish or fourish files!
gollark: It would be fully eldritch, but opening portals to the fourteenth plane is currently unavailable in Python.
gollark: I've actually managed to convert much of the potatOS code into a single file now! It's amazing what you can do with a somewhat eldritch build process and lots of fiddling!

References

  1. "Sporting Club Partners with LIVESTRONG". Sporting Kansas City. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
  2. "Ownership". Sporting Kansas City. Retrieved 10 September 2014.
  3. "Swope Soccer Village". Sporting Kansas City. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
  4. McDowell, Sam. "Sporting Club to announce plans Thursday for United Soccer League franchise". The Kansas City Star. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
  5. "Sporting Club Network". Sporting Kansas City. Retrieved 20 November 2015.
  6. Carlisle, Jeff. "Sporting Kansas City: 'No truth' to report of Everton takeover". ESPN. Retrieved 19 October 2015.
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