Sporting KC travels to Houston today to defend Open Cup title

A pair of bitter MLS rivals will square off Wednesday in the 2018 Lamar Hunt U.S. Open Cup quarterfinals when four-time champion and current titleholder Sporting Kansas City visits the Houston Dynamo at BBVA Compass Stadium in Houston.

The pivotal matchup will kick off at 7:30 p.m. and stream live on SportingKC.com as Sporting KC and Houston lock horns in the Open Cup for a fourth straight year.

Reigning Open Cup champion Sporting KC enters Wednesday on a four-game winless skid in MLS play, having dropped from first to third in the Western Conference table over the last fortnight.

The club is looking to bounce back from a 3-2 defeat at the New York Red Bulls on Saturday that saw Johnny Russell score early to record his team-leading eighth goal of the campaign.

Influential midfielder Roger Espinoza, who has a team-best eight assists, notched his first goal of 2018 with a 25-yard stunner that gave Sporting KC a 2-1 lead shortly after halftime, but the Red Bulls rallied behind second-half substitute Marc Rzatkowski’s late brace.

Sporting KC punched their ticket to the Open Cup quarterfinals with a pulsating 3-2 home win over FC Dallas on June 16, which produced a jaw-dropping game-winner from French midfielder Yohan Croizet in the 85th minute. The wild victory came 10 days after a 2-0 road win over rivals Real Salt Lake in the Fourth Round, sparked by Russell’s go-ahead goal and late assist to Kharlton Belmar.

The Dynamo reached the quarterfinals for the third time in four years after edging past Minnesota United FC by a 1-0 score on June 18.

Forward Mauro Manotas, who leads the side with 10 goals in all competitions, provided the lone goal two minutes into the second half to set up Wednesday’s date with Sporting KC. On Saturday, Houston played the Colorado Rapids to a drab 0-0 draw in the Rocky Mountains as goalkeeper Joe Willis kept his third clean sheet of the year.

Houston boasts one of the league’s most potent attacks, spearheaded by the dynamic Honduran duo of Alberth Elis and Romell Quioto.

The 22-year-old Elis has 16 combined goals (9) and assists (7) this season, the sixth-best mark in MLS, and leads the league with 33 shots on target. Quioto, meanwhile, has assisted 10 goals and created 12 big chances, ranking second in MLS in both categories. Manotas, with nine MLS goals of his own, has notably scored five times in five career appearances against Sporting KC.

These teams last met in the MLS regular season on June 23, when Sporting KC rallied from a two-goal halftime deficit to prevail 3-2 at Children’s Mercy Park.

Manotas bagged a brace to put the visitors in front 2-0 before Daniel Salloi, Diego Rubio and Khiry Shelton struck in the second half to seal a dramatic comeback victory that saw Sporting KC snap an eight-game MLS winless skid against the Dynamo.

Familiarity reigns supreme in this particular fixture, as Sporting KC and Houston have battled 28 times in all competitions since the start of 2011.

Manager Peter Vermes’ men own a narrow 10-9-9 edge during that stretch, which includes six meetings in the MLS Cup Playoffs and four in the U.S. Open Cup.

Wednesday marks the fourth consecutive season in which Sporting KC and Houston have crossed Open Cup paths. Sporting KC prevailed in the 2015 quarterfinals and the 2017 Round of 16, going on to win the tournament in both years, while Houston won in the 2016 Round of 16 before bowing out to eventual champion FC Dallas in the quarterfinals.

Only two other teams have met in four straight editions of the Open Cup during the tournament’s modern era, which began in 1995: the New York Red Bulls and Philadelphia Union have also squared off in the Open Cup each year since 2015.

Sporting KC has enjoyed tremendous success in the Open Cup over the last six seasons.

Since 2012, Vermes’ side has won the trophy three times and boasts a 17-3-3 tournament record. Those three draws account for penalty shootout victories in the 2012 and 2015 finals as well as the 2017 semifinal, meaning Sporting KC has prevailed in 20 of its last 23 Open Cup matches.

The 2018 competition gives Sporting KC the opportunity to claim a fifth Open Cup championship, which would break a tie with the Chicago Fire and Seattle Sounders FC for the most among MLS clubs.

The eight teams still alive in this year’s tournament lack no incentive to chase Open Cup glory: the winner of the 2018 edition will receive $300,000 in prize money, up from $250,000 last year, and the tournament runner-up will receive $100,000 (up from $60,000).

The 2018 champion will also receive a berth in the 2019 CONCACAF Champions League, a tournament for which Sporting KC has already qualified as last year’s winner.

– Story from Sporting KC

Judge candidates to appear at forum tonight at KCKCC

Business West, along with Kansas City Kansas Community College, will co-sponsor a Candidates’ Forum starting at 7 p.m. Wednesday, July 18, in the Upper Jewell building at the Kansas City Kansas Community College 7250 State Ave.

Democratic candidates for District Judge who plan to attend are Mike Nichols, Tony Martinez and Jane Sieve Wilson.

Panelists who will ask the candidates questions will be Mary Rupert of the Wyandotte Daily Online, Jim Echols of Renaissance Management and Edgar Galicia of the Central Avenue Betterme nt Association.

Murrel Bland of Business West will be the moderator.

T-Bones hit five home runs in trouncing Texas team, 11-7

Breaking their own records, the T-Bones came out swinging in Cleburne against the Railroaders and won it all in extra innings by a final of 11-7.

Kansas City had five home runs in the night, their highest of the season, and they got 16 hits while fighting a fierce battle in Cleburne, Texas.

The T-Bones started hot, loading the bases with the first three batters.

Noah Perio Jr. came up to bat next and a fielder’s choice sent Dylan Tice running home to give the T-Bones the lead in the first inning 1-0.

Cleburne was not to be outdone, putting runners on all three bases with no outs. A sacrifice fly to right field sent Railroaders’ Trevor Sealey in to tie up the game. A double steal from the Railroaders put them in scoring position with runners on second and third.

Taking advantage of the opportunity, the Railroaders got a run on a ground out to short by Cam Monger, making the score at the end of the first inning, Cleburne 2, Kansas City 1.

Mason Davis kicked off the second inning with a homer to tie the game. In the bottom of the second, T-Bones pitcher Lucas Irvine finished off the inning, pitching two strikeouts in a row to send the Railroaders to the dugout.

The third inning was just as exciting, with Taylor Featherston hitting a triple that sent Colin Walsh running home and Curcio following up with a sacrifice fly to the left that put Featherston on the board, increasing the T-Bones lead to 4 – 2.

In the field, Keith Curcio caught former teammate Angel Rosa’s hit as it reached the wall, denying him what could’ve been a double or a home run in the third.

The Railroaders couldn’t score in the third, and the T-Bones didn’t score in the fourth. The Railroaders, however, did score, decreasing Kansas City’s lead to just one, making it 4 – 3.

In the fifth inning, Cleburne was plagued with errors, and in the sixth the Cleburne pitcher walked three T-Bones. Despite those advantages, the T-Bones weren’t able to score. After three innings without the T-Bones scoring, Cleburne would tie it as Monger hit a homer to tie the game in the bottom of the sixth to even the score at four.

The T-Bones were feeling the pressure, and with two outs Mason Davis hit a triple, but they weren’t able to convert it to a run.

Cleburne, on the other hand, used the pressure to score two runs. Kicking into gear, the T-Bones came back and tied it at six, thanks to a two-run home run from Noah Perio Jr. that sent both him and Walsh home to score.

A sacrifice fly from Angel Rosa gave the Railroaders the lead in the bottom of the eighth after three walks.

With two outs in the top of the ninth, Mason Davis was up to bat, the last hope for the T-Bones. With an 0-2 count he hit his second home run of the night and the game was tied at seven each.

In the bottom of the ninth, the T-Bones were hoping for extra innings. Thanks to three strikeouts from T-Bones pitcher Marcus Crescentini, they got their wish.

Todd Cunningham started the tenth inning off with a bang, hitting his first home run of the season.

Blowing it wide open, Keith Curcio hit a three-run home run, putting the score at Kansas City 11– Cleburne 7.

Ultimately, the Railroaders weren’t able to answer and the T-Bones walked away victorious after a long, tough battle. The two teams will play again at 7:05 p.m. Wednesday in Texas as the T-Bones hope to sweep the series.

Individual tickets, season, group, mini-plans and nightly party suites are on sale and can be purchased by visiting the box office at T-Bones Stadium or www.tbonesbaseball.com. Box office hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday-Friday and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday.

The T-Bones’ games are airing on the T-Bones Broadcast Network, http://mixlr.com/t-bones-baseball/.

– Story from T-Bones