Sporting KC drops crucial match to Salt Lake, 2-1

Johnny Russell put Sporting KC ahead with a free kick from just outside the penalty area. Russell scored Kansas City’s only goal in the 2-1 loss to Salt Lake. (Photo copyright 2019 by Brian Turrel)
 

by Brian Turrel

Sporting Kansas City missed an opportunity to crawl back into the MLS Western Conference playoff chase, losing 2-1 to Real Salt Lake at Children’s Mercy Park on Saturday evening.

The home team scored first in the 31st minute. Felipe Gutierrez was taken down just inches outside the penalty area, giving Johnny Russell the opportunity to take a dangerous free kick. Russell launched his shot to the left edge of the goal, past Salt Lake goalkeeper Nick Rimando.

Salt Lake tied the game a few minutes later when it earned a free kick of its own. The kick bounced off the goalpost, but Salt Lake’s Corey Baird knocked in the rebound from close range.

Kansas City had the chance to go ahead in first half stoppage time on a penalty kick from Felipe Gutierrez, but the ball bounced off the woodwork. Salt Lake cleared the ball and ran out the first half clock.

Salt Lake got the game-winning goal in the 70th minute. Baird picked up his second goal of the night by putting away a fine diagonal pass from Jefferson Savarino.

Daniel Salloi was given a red card and ejected in the 84th minute for a dangerous challenge. Salloi had come on as a substitute in the 6th minute when Gerso Fernandes suffered an early ankle injury.

In post-game comments, head coach Peter Vermes returned to the theme of missed opportunities, which he has sounded several times this season.

“It’s our own fault,” the coach said. “We had all the chances in the world in the first half and we didn’t stick them away.”

Kansas City is 8 points behind the playoff line in the Western Conference standings, with only 10 games left in the regular season. The team will travel to play Orlando City SC on Wednesday, and then will return home for a game against the San Jose Earthquakes next Saturday evening.

As part of Sporting KC’s salute to the military, artist Joe Everson sang the national anthem while he painted a tribute to the Purple Heart recipients honored by the team. (Photo copyright 2019 by Brian Turrel)

 

A young fan of the Air Force and Sporting KC got the chance to talk to the flyover squadron. (Photo copyright 2019 by Brian Turrel)

 

Forward Johnny Russell centered the ball from the right side. (Photo copyright 2019 by Brian Turrel)

 

Graham Zusi’s cutback move spun around Salt Lake defender Donny Toia and gave Zusi a path to the goal. (Photo copyright 2019 by Brian Turrel)

 

Kansas City defender Andreu Fontas challenged Salt Lake’s Damir Kreilach for a ball in the air. (Photo copyright 2019 by Brian Turrel)

 

Midfielder Felipe Gutierrez crossed the ball in from the left side. (Photo copyright 2019 by Brian Turrel)

 

Forward Daniel Salloi’s acrobatic kick sailed over the Salt Lake goal. (Photo copyright 2019 by Brian Turrel)

 

World War II veteran Jerry Ingram represented Friends in Service of Heroes (FISH) a veterans’ assistance organization. (Photo copyright 2019 by Brian Turrel)

 

A squadron of A-10s from Whiteman Air Force Base flew over during the singing of the national anthem. (Photo copyright 2019 by Brian Turrel)

Former employee sues UG

by Andrea Tudhope, KCUR, Kansas News Service

Just over a week after her old boss was convicted of battery against her, Maddie Waldeck is suing the Unified Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas, where they both worked.

Waldeck, who no longer works for the UG, told KCUR the two years she worked with Dennis “Tib” Laughlin were the “most stressful and heartbreaking of her professional life.”

The lawsuit says Laughlin, who was a high-ranking official of the UG, engaged in “a pattern and practice of gender discrimination, harassment and retaliation.”

Laughlin did not immediately respond to KCUR’s request for comment.

Waldeck started documenting every encounter that made her uncomfortable after the State of the Government address in 2016, when Laughlin approached her table, she said, and asked if she’d heard the rumor they were sleeping together.

According to the lawsuit, Waldeck complained five times either to Laughlin or his supervisor, Assistant County Administrator Melissa Sieben. At one point, Waldeck said, she told Sieben, “I can’t work for him anymore. I’ll go anywhere.”

Her lawsuit says the UG “failed to discipline Laughlin” and denied her request for transfer.

“I felt that they knew this person delivered results, so they would sweep things under the rug in order to get things accomplished. And they would try to talk me out of it,” Waldeck said.

At Waldeck’s grandmother’s funeral in January 2018, the lawsuit says, Laughlin told Waldeck, “it’s a shame that your grandmother had to die in order for you to wear a dress like that.”

When she reported this comment and the pattern of behavior to county administration, Waldeck said Sieben told her he was “just trying to pay her a compliment,” and that she should “research some trainings for him.”

“Because of its actions, Unified Government deliberately rendered Waldeck’s working conditions intolerable, leaving Waldeck no choice but to resign,” the lawsuit says.

On the day Waldeck told her staff she was resigning, Laughlin grabbed her by the shirt and pushed her into a cubicle wall in front of two other employees. A jury convicted Laughlin for the incident on July 30. A day later, after 21 years at the UG, Laughlin resigned. His sentencing is later this month.

After Laughlin’s conviction, UG Public Relations Director Mike Taylor told KCUR that UG officials were surprised by the verdict, because they had conducted an internal investigation of the incident and “came to a different conclusion than the jury.”

Asked to comment on the lawsuit, Taylor told KCUR the UG does not comment on pending litigation.

“Nobody would do anything. Nobody would help me,” Waldeck told KCUR. “And because of their failure to intervene, this guy felt comfortable to put his hands on me and push me in front of two other people, and then I’m the one who was punished.”

After the battery incident, Waldeck was told by HR to stay home and then was placed on administrative leave, according to the lawsuit, which says this was an act of retaliation against Waldeck for reporting the assault to the Kansas City, Kansas, Police Department.

The lawsuit says the UG’s actions were “willful, wanton and malicious and in reckless disregard for Waldeck’s rights.” As a result, it says, Waldeck suffered lost income, mental anguish and emotional distress.

Waldeck told KCUR that over the course of the two years she worked with Laughlin, her health “spiraled out of control.”

Making it out of what the lawsuit called an “intimidating and hostile working environment” was a relief for Waldeck, though it meant leaving behind her “dream job.”

“I just try to take it one day at a time. I always try to tell myself, no matter how sad I get about this, the life that I have now is better because I don’t have to worry about working for him anymore. I would rather take the sadness that I feel now, than the pain and helplessness I felt back then,” Waldeck said.

Waldeck is seeking missed pay, attorneys fees and compensatory and punitive damages. Her lawyers have requested a jury trial.

Andrea Tudhope is a reporter at KCUR 89.3. Email her at [email protected], and follow her on Twitter @andreatudhope. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished at no cost with proper attribution and a link back to kcur.org.
See more at
https://www.kcur.org/post/nobody-would-help-me-former-employee-sues-unified-government-kansas-city-kansas

Faith news

To send in items for the Faith News, email information to [email protected]. Please include your name and contact information.

Christ the King Catholic Church, 3024 N. 53rd St., Kansas City, Kansas, is planning an ice cream social after the 4 p.m. Mass on Saturday, Aug. 24. The social will be from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. and will include food, cake, ice cream, booths and bingo.

The Keeler Women’s Center reopened July 1 at a new location, 759 Vermont Ave., Suite 100-B, Kansas City, Kansas.
The Gospel Non-Violence Study Group will meet from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 20, at the Keeler Women’s Center, 759 Vermont Ave., Suite 100-B, Kansas City, Kansas. The group is facilitated by Peg Burns Kerbawy.
Scripture Study and Reflection will be held from 9:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. Wednesdays at the Keeler Women’s Center, 759 Vermont Ave., Suite 100-B, Kansas City, Kansas.
To register for classes, call 913-906-8990. The Keeler Women’s Center is a ministry of the Benedictine Sisters. For more information, visit www.keelerwomenscenter.org.

The century-old St. John the Baptist Croatian Festival is set for Saturday, Aug. 17, on historic Strawberry Hill. Activities will begin at 5 p.m. on the parish grounds, 708 N. 4th St., Kansas City, Kansas. Admission is free. Traditional Croatian food including sarma (cabbage rolls) and sausage sandwiches, cibanac (Croatian stew) and palacinke (crepes) will be served along with traditional summer fare, hamburgers, hot dogs, soft drinks and beer. The kids’ area will have games and prizes. Other booths will include povitica, apple strudel, surprise packages or salami. The Strawberry Hill Boutique will have T-shirts and aprons designed by Kansas City artist Michael Savage of Sav-Art. There will also be strawberry-themed jewelry and magnets. Hrvatski Obicaj will play Croatian music, and as the festival winds down, there will be a free dance with music by Kolograd on the Strawberry Hill Museum grounds. For more information, visit the Facebook page for OurCroatianParish.

The Grief Share support group at Stony Point Christian Church, 149 S. 78th St., Kansas City, Kansas, will meet Sunday, Aug. 25. For more information or to sign up for the group, visit http://stonypointchristian.org/.

Members of St. Paul’s Episcopal Church, 1300 N. 18th St., Kansas City, Kansas, will observe the tenth Sunday after Pentecost at 10 a.m. Aug. 11.

St. Peter’s Fall Festival is planned from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 21, at the Cathedral of St. Peter, 422 N. 14th St., Kansas City, Kansas.

Wyandotte United Methodist Church, 7901 Oakland Ave., Kansas City, Kansas, will meet for worship services on Aug. 11 at 8:30 a.m. and 11 a.m., with Sunday school at 9:45 a.m. An all-church breakfast is planned from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 24.frtg

Send Faith News items to [email protected]. Please include your contact information. If there is inclement weather, check with the sponsoring organization to see if the event will still be held.