Lawrence artist burns message of unity in Kansas field for inauguration

Earthworks artist Stan Herd stands on an elevated platform to show the phrase he and his team seared into a hay field near Lawrence over the weekend. The phrase, burned in with a torch and outlined with mulch, will be featured in Joe Biden’s virtual inaugural celebration. (Photo by Carlos Moreno, KCUR, Kansas News Service)

Stan Herd, renowned for intricate landscape designs, featured in the “Parade Across America,” a virtual inauguration celebration.

by Carlos Moreno, Kansas News Service

A Lawrence crop artist was featured in President-elect Joe Biden’s virtual inauguration Wednesday.

Stan Herd, known for elaborate portraits and other designs cut into fields, has crafted a message of unity for Wednesday’s celebration. He and his team carefully charred the phrase, “America United” in a former hay field outside Lawrence.

The 12-man crew finished Sunday. Herd told KCUR the project, requested by the Biden-Harris inauguration team, was an easy one.

“This is the simplest image I’ve done in 25 years,” he says. “It’s just big letters.”

The large, block text covers about one acre of land belonging to one of Herd’s supporters. He calls this piece and other portraits he’s made of Kamala Harris and Joe Biden a “grassroots effort.”

“This was just an opportunity, quite frankly, to get involved in this final throwdown of the inauguration after this arduous journey that we’ve all been on to try to move the country back in a direction of normalcy,” he said.

He and his team cut the shape with weed trimmers and used mulch around the letters to form an outline. Then, they used a butane torch to burn the interior part of the letters to make them stand out.

Earthworks artist Stan Herd stood near the message he and his team created over the weekend on a hay field near Lawrence. A video of the process and an aerial view of the finished product was aired Wednesday as part of Biden’s “Parade Across America.” (Photo by Carlos Moreno, KCUR, Kansas News Service)

A video of the process and an aerial view of the finished product will be aired Wednesday as part of Biden’s “Parade Across America.”

While Herd was glad to take on this project, he said he wants to move away from political pieces in the future.

He considers himself a political moderate and has been frustrated with President Trump — who he’s worked with before.

About 18 years ago, Herd created a portrait on land belonging to then-real estate developer Donald Trump. He even met Rudy Giuliani in Trump’s office and said both men are completely different today than they were back then.

He said he’s been disappointed by the polarization of the country and hopes the coming years will allow him to focus on the art he wants to do.

“I’m just much more happy when I’m moving,” Herd said. “I’m 70. I’m recovering from cancer and I’m just on fire to change the world with art.”

Carlos Moreno is a freelance multimedia journalist who works in the Kansas City metro. The Kansas News Service is a collaboration of KCUR, Kansas Public Radio, KMUW and High Plains Public Radio focused on health, the social determinants of health and their connection to public policy. Kansas News Service stories and photos may be republished by news media at no cost with proper attribution and a link to ksnewsservice.org.
See more at https://www.kcur.org/politics-elections-and-government/2021-01-19/lawrence-artist-burns-message-of-unity-into-kansas-field-for-biden-harris-inauguration.

Sporting KC signs three young players

Sporting Kansas City has signed 20-year-old midfielder Grayson Barber, 16-year-old forward Ozzie Cisneros and 18-year-old goalkeeper Brooks Thompson as homegrown players.

The three players have signed multi-year MLS contracts with options.

With the three new players, 10 of the 26 players on Sporting’s current MLS roster have developed in the club’s academy, according to the announcement. The average age of the squad is 25 years old.

“I’m delighted to sign for Sporting KC,” Barber said. “It’s really a dream come true to be back in Kansas City after developing in the Academy. I have always dreamed of playing for this club and getting this opportunity is a great feeling.”

“I’m extremely happy to sign a contract with the first team at Sporting KC,” Cisneros said. “This been a dream of mine ever since I first joined the Academy and I’m ready to work my hardest for the club.”

“I’m extremely happy to sign my first MLS contract and join the first team,” Thompson said. “I look forward to what the year has to offer and can’t wait to get to work.”

Barber, a member of the Sporting KC Academy from 2015-2017, enjoyed a standout collegiate career at Clemson University from 2018-2020. The playmaker amassed 13 goals and 18 assists in 49 appearances across three seasons, leading Clemson to the 2019 NCAA Tournament quarterfinals and the 2020 ACC Championship.

Born and raised in central South Carolina, Barber recorded a goal and two assists during his freshman campaign at Clemson before breaking out as a sophomore in 2019. He tallied 10 goals and nine assists en route to All-ACC Second Team honors as the Tigers posted an 18-2-2 record and finished one game short of the Men’s College Cup.

As a junior last fall, Barber and Clemson were crowned winners of the ACC Championship with wins over Virginia Tech, Virginia and Wake Forest. Barber bagged two goals and led the nation with seven assists, helping Clemson to a No. 1 ranking in the final United Soccer Coaches poll of the season. He saved his best performances for the end of the year, setting an ACC Championship record with four assists in the tournament.

Before arriving at Clemson, Barber starred for the Sporting KC Academy and was named to the United Soccer Coaches Youth Boys All-America Team at the end of 2017. He moved from South Carolina to Kansas City to begin his Academy journey in 2015 and made nearly 60 appearances in the U.S. Soccer Development Academy over the next three seasons. He also featured for the United States at the youth international level, training with the U-17s in 2016 and joining the U.S. U-17 Residency Program the following spring in Bradenton, Florida.

Cisneros, who has competed for Sporting at the U-13 through U-19 levels over the last five years, becomes the fourth-youngest signing in Sporting history at age 16. The versatile forward is one of the brightest American prospects in his age group and represented the U.S. U-15 Boys’ National Team throughout 2018 and 2019. He notably starred at the 2019 Concacaf U-15 Championship in Bradenton, scoring both goals in a 2-0 quarterfinal win over Costa Rica, and also found the back of the net at the 2019 Torneo delle Nazioni in Italy.

A native of Omaha, Nebraska, Cisneros joined the Sporting KC Academy as a 12-year-old in 2016. That summer, he led Sporting to a fourth-place finish at the Concacaf U-13 Champions League in Mexico City. Cisneros went on to play almost 70 matches for Sporting in the U.S. Soccer Development Academy, scoring 15 goals and climbing to the U-19 ranks by the time he was 15. He helped the U-17s reach the 2019 Development Academy Playoffs and split time between the U-17s and U-19s during the first half of the 2019-20 campaign.

Following a six-month pause due to the COVID-19 pandemic, Cisneros and the Sporting KC Academy returned to competitive action last September in MLS Next, a newly launched youth platform featuring elite academy clubs from across the country. Cisneros struck twice during the abbreviated fall season-once for the U-17s and once for the U-19s. He was also featured extensively in “The Academy,” a five-part documentary series from Audi and Bleacher Report that highlighted youth development within the Sporting KC Academy system.

Thompson, who will return from injury this summer to continue playing, has two seasons of professional experience with Sporting Kansas City II in the USL Championship. He led Sporting KC II goalkeepers during the shortened 2020 campaign with 26 saves and a 1.17 goals against average in six matches.

The 6-foot-3 Thompson exploded for a career-high nine saves in his 2020 debut on July 18 at Indy Eleven, including one that placed second in USL Championship Fans’ Choice Save of the Year voting. He earned his first professional clean sheet two weeks later against the same team, saving four shots in a 1-0 win to land USL Championship Team of the Week honors. Thompson collected his second victory of the season by making another four saves in a 2-1 result at FC Tulsa on Aug. 29.

Thompson, who grew up in Floyds Knobs, Indiana, joined the Sporting KC Academy in the summer of 2018 following a two-year stint with the IMG Academy in Florida. He played a leading role for the U-19s during the 2018-19 Development Academy campaign, posting a 7-2-3 record with four clean sheets while also featuring in the Generation adidas Cup.

After logging two preseason appearances for the Sporting KC first team in early 2019, Thompson made his jump to the USL Championship in March of that year. At 16, he became the youngest professional signing in Sporting KC II history and claimed victory in his pro debut against Hartford Athletic on July 17, 2019, at Children’s Mercy Park.

Barber, Cisneros and Thompson join Gianluca Busio, Cam Duke, Tyler Freeman, Wilson Harris, Felipe Hernandez, Jaylin Lindsey and Daniel Salloi as Academy products on Sporting’s roster.

  • Information from Sporting KC

Sports play a key role in revitalizing community

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Opinion column

by Murrel Bland

Sports plays a key role in the quality of life.

That, simply stated, is what drives Kathy Nelson who is president of the Kansas City Sports Commission. She was the featured speaker at a meeting via Zoom at the Fairfax Industrial Association Thursday, Jan. 14.

She told of how the Sports Commission brings various sporting events to Kansas City. The Big 12 men and women’s basketball tournaments and the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics basketball tournament are three of the more well-known sporting events that Kansas City hosts.

Nelson said the National Football League draft will be held in Kansas City in 2023. The commission owns and manages the annual Kansas City Marathon which attracts more than 10,000 runners from out of town.

Presently, Nelson and a group of volunteers, including Kansas City, Kansas, Mayor David Alvey, are hoping to attract The World Cup to Kansas City in 2026. This event of the Federation International de Football Association (FIFA) is estimated to be worth the equivalent of four Super Bowls. The event would be played at Arrowhead Stadium.

Nelson was very much involved in putting together the victory parades for the World Series and Super Bowl wins.

Nelson played a key, behind–the-scenes, role in arranging for the benefit Kansas-Missouri basketball game. She said the National Collegiate Athletic Association women’s bowling championship will be at the Pro Bowl in North Kansas City.

Nelson said sports played a key role in the revitalizing of downtown Kansas City, Missouri, with the addition of the T-Mobile Arena. She said her parents both worked downtown. She could recall when it wasn’t safe to go there at night.

When asked about a Major League downtown baseball stadium, she said she was neutral on such a proposal. However, she said she has visited other cities and seen how such stadiums can enhance downtowns. She said a smaller stadium which would seat 10,000 persons might be a possibility downtown.

Before joining the Sports Commission in 2010, she held senior management positions with WDAF-TV, Time Warner Cable and Metro Sports. She is a graduate of Winnetonka High School and attended Truman State University, Kirksville, Missouri.

Murrel Bland is the former editor of The Wyandotte West and The Piper Press. He is the executive director of Business West.