Sporting travels to California Wednesday to play in U.S. Open Cup semifinal

Sporting Kansas City will play for a berth in the 2022 U.S. Open Cup Final when the team takes on Sacramento Republic FC at 9:30 p.m. on Wednesday at Heart Health Park in the California capital.

The semifinal match will air live on ESPN+ with local radio coverage available on Sports Radio 810 WHB (English) and La Grande 1340 AM (Spanish).

Open to all professional and amateur teams affiliated with U.S. Soccer, the 2022 U.S. Open Cup featured the largest field in the competition’s modern era (1995-present) with 103 clubs from all levels of the sport. Four teams remain in a semifinal round which will feature a doubleheader on Wednesday, beginning with Orlando City SC and the New York Red Bulls at 6:30 p.m. followed by Sporting Kansas City and Sacramento Republic FC at 9:30 p.m.

Contested since 1914 and named in honor of former Kansas City Wizards owner Lamar Hunt, this year’s U.S. Open Cup will crown a champion on Sept. 7 with the tournament winner to receive $300,000 in prize money, a berth in the 2023 Concacaf Champions League and the honor of having its name engraved on the Dewar Challenge Trophy.

Sporting has prevailed in 24 U.S. Open Cup matches since 2012 — more than any other team in American soccer — and owns four U.S. Open Cup titles in club history as champions in 2004, 2012, 2015 and 2017.

Manager Peter Vermes’ squad has advanced to the semifinals for a sixth time in club history with a thrilling 4-2 win in extra time against FC Dallas in the Round of 32, a 2-1 come-from-behind rally against the Houston Dynamo in the Round of 16 and a 6-0 victory over USL League One champions Union Omaha in the quarterfinals.

Now, Sporting Kansas City hits the road to face USL Championship side Sacramento Republic FC – marking the first time KC plays away at a USL club in the U.S. Open Cup since visiting the Minnesota Thunder in 2009 and the first time KC has traveled to California for a U.S. Open Cup match since the Wizards played the San Francisco Bay Seals in 1997.

Wednesday’s match will be the first meeting between Sporting KC and Sacramento, although Sporting KC II played the Republic seven times from 2016 to 2018 including a pair of postseason victories. Sporting KC forward Daniel Salloi and midfielder Felipe Hernandez – who each scored twice in the U.S. Open Cup quarterfinals — both have experience playing at Heart Health Park with Sporting KC II.

Located on the grounds of the Cal Expo, the 11,569-seat stadium was constructed for Sacramento’s debut season in 2014 and Wednesday’s showdown — which will be played amid the backdrop of the California State Fair — is sold out in anticipation of the venue’s biggest match since the Republic won the USL Pro Championship in September 2014.

Preki, a Sporting Legend who played nine seasons in Kansas City, coached Sacramento to the title in 2014 with a team led by Championship MVP Rodrigo Lopez. The club’s first ever signing is now in his third stint with the club and his four goals in this year’s U.S. Open Cup are most of any player. The 35-year-old playmaker has scored the second most goals in club history, however missed the team’s match on Saturday in health and safety protocols.

Sacramento Republic FC General Manager Todd Dunivant – a U.S. Open Cup champion and five-time MLS Cup winner as a player – and head coach Mark Briggs revamped the Republic roster for 2022 with only six players remaining from last season, including 25-year-old Maalique Foster and 26-year-old Luis Felipe. Foster leads the team with four league goals in only 305 minutes of action while Felipe has scored game-winning goals in Sacramento’s last three U.S. Open Cup matches.

The Republic roster features eight players with MLS appearances in their careers — including the addition of 31-year-old stiker Deshorn Brown last week — as well as 30-year-old winger Keko Gontan, who has made 135 appearances in Spain’s La Liga and Italy’s Serie A.

Defensively, Sacramento is anchored by USL Championship Golden Glove winner Danny Vitiello in goal and a back three of Lee Desmond, Conor Donovan and Dan Casey. In the trio’s 11 starts together this year, Sacramento has allowed only five goals and is yet to concede multiple goals in a game.

The first lower-division team to reach the tournament’s semifinals since 2017, the Republic are now aiming to be the first club outside MLS to reach the final since 2008 and the first lower-division team to defeat an MLS club in the semifinals since 1999.

The club’s run began with a 6-0 win over Portland Timbers U-23’s, followed by a 2-1 win over Central Valley Fuego and a 2-0 win over Phoenix Rising FC. Sacramento then produced back-to-back upsets of MLS clubs, defeating the San Jose Earthquakes by a 2-0 scoreline in the Round of 16 before beating the LA Galaxy with a 2-1 result on the road in the quarterfinals.

After going 5-0-0 in June, Sacramento is amid a four-game winless run in the month of July during which the club suffered its first home loss of the year (9-1-3). The Republic has historically enjoyed a significant home field advantage in the U.S. Open Cup, prevailing in 16 of the 17 home matches in the competition including wins in all three matches against MLS opponents.

  • Story from Sporting KC

Kansas governor warns passage of constitutional amendment will invite wave of abortion restrictions

Kansas voters at forefront of national debate following reversal of Roe v. Wade

by Tim Carpenter, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Gov. Laura Kelly warned passage of an amendment removing the right to abortion from the Kansas Constitution would prompt an emboldened Republican-led Legislature to pass new restraints on the right of women to control their reproductive health.

“The amendment is written in such a way that the proponents of the amendment want to suggest that this would just leave things as they are in Kansas. But that’s not true,” Kelly said during the Kansas Reflector podcast. “What would happen if that amendment would pass is that the Legislature would immediately come back with some very severe restrictions on a woman’s ability to control her own fate.”

Kelly said she was voting against the amendment because it was essential to reinforce the right of women to maintain bodily autonomy. She expected the statewide vote to be “very close.” It follows the June reversal by the U.S. Supreme Court of the landmark Roe v. Wade decision that affirmed nationwide the right to abortion.

Voting in Kansas closes Aug. 2 on the amendment, which was drafted by opponents of abortion and approved by two-thirds majorities in the House and Senate. Campaign finance reports show more than $11 million has been spent to influence public opinion on the amendment.

Kelly said she was confident in the security and accuracy of voting in this and future Kansas elections, because state and local officials took their duties seriously.

“You know, I think if you want to have a voice in what happens in your life in your world, then it’s important that you take the time, make the effort to go to the polls and elect people you think will truly represent your values,” the governor said.

Kelly is seeking reelection as governor in November. She will be competing against Republican Derek Schmidt, the state’s attorney general and a former colleague of Kelly’s in the Kansas Senate. In addition, state Sen. Dennis Pyle, a conservative Republican from Hiawatha, is collecting petition signatures in an attempt to get on the Nov. 8 ballot as an independent candidate for governor.

Kelly said during the podcast interview she would focus her campaign on “bread-and-butter” issues of education, transportation, health care, tax relief, the social safety net, economic development and stability of the state budget. She was elected in 2018 following eight years with Republican Govs. Jeff Colyer and Sam Brownback at the helm.

“Our budget was a mess when I came into office,” Kelly said. “We have now fully funded our schools for the last four years. That was incredibly important to Kansans. Not only have we been able to fully fund, you know, basic essential services in the state, we’ve also been able to eliminate the sales tax on food. And we are now sitting on the largest ending balance in the state’s history. We’ve got about $1.5 billion in our ending balance.”

In the 2022 legislative session, Kelly and legislators set aside nearly $1 billion in a rainy day fund for future use by the state and invested more than $1 billion in the state’s pension system. State lawmakers adopted an unprecedented economic development incentive program relied upon by the Kelly administration to leverage $829 million to attract a $4 billion Panasonic vehicle battery plant to Johnson County.

Kelly said growth in the state’s economy during her term was important to recovery from Brownback-era tax policies that starved the state treasury. Funding was cannibalized from government agencies, including the Kansas Department of Transportation, as revenue plummeted. The Brownback income tax “experiment,” as he referred to it, was largely repealed in 2017 by the Legislature.

“If I wanted to be able to fund the services that I felt essential — our roads, our schools, our foster care system — that I was going to have to grow this economy and do it quickly,” said Kelly, a Democrat. “I have no interest in raising taxes. I think our property taxes are too high. And, obviously I wanted to eliminate food sales tax. So the only other way to accomplish my goals was to grow the economy and increase the amount of revenue coming into the state.”

With the Panasonic development, which includes 4,000 direct new jobs, Kelly said the state had benefitted from $13.5 billion in capital investments and creation or preservation of 50,000 jobs since she became governor.

“We looked back at the last administration to see what had happened over their eight years, and they brought in less new capital investment in eight years than we have done in three and a half,” Kelly said.

Kelly predicted that following her reelection in November the Legislature would pass a bill expanding eligibility for Medicaid services to lower-income Kansans.

The Legislature approved expansion in 2017, but Brownback vetoed the measure. Since then, the House and Senate haven’t agreed on an expansion plan.

“I presented four different proposals for Medicaid expansion,” Kelly said. “I think that leadership will finally let the rank and file vote on it. You know, our rural hospitals desperately need this, but even our urban hospitals. They’re taking care of a lot of uncompensated care patients.”

Kelly signed a bill this year eliminating the state’s 6.5% sales tax on groceries over a three-year period starting in 2023. She had proposed repeal of the food sales tax effective July 1. If reelected, Kelly said she would again seek immediate end of the state sales tax on groceries.

“That’s precisely what I would want to do,” Kelly said. “I’ll come back with my original proposal. There’s really no reason not to go ahead and just do it.”

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2022/07/25/kansas-governor-warns-passage-of-constitutional-amendment-will-invite-wave-of-abortion-restrictions/

KCK school district to hold open house Thursday to recruit new staff

The Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools District is kicking off several hiring campaigns as well as offering recruitment sessions to help hire new staff for the upcoming 2022-2023 school year.

The district is looking to hire teachers (K-12), substitute teachers, bus drivers, instructional aides, paraprofessionals, school nurses, nutritional service workers, support staff and more.

Open House and Career Fairs:

• There will be an open house, information session for retired teachers on Thursday, July 28, from 3:30 p.m. until 4:30 p.m. at Carl B. Bruce Middle School, 2100 N. 18th St., Kansas City, Kansas.

• There will be a certified and classified career fair Thursday, July 28, from 4:30 p.m. until 6:30 p.m. at Carl B. Bruce Middle School

• The Aug. 4 certified, and classified career fair takes place from 4:30 p.m. until 6:30 p.m. and will be held at Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools Central Office, 2010 N. 59th St., Kansas City, Kansas.

All full-time new hires will receive a $1,500 sign on bonus after 90 days for joining the KCKPS district team. All part-time new hires will receive a $750 signing bonus after 90 days. Substitute employees will receive a pro-rated amount and some substitute positions will receive benefits.

Bus drivers wanted:

Those who join the team will receive their CDL (Commercial Driver’s License), free training and a free physical exam. New hires will also receive a minimum of $20.80 per hour and a $1,500 signing bonus after 90 days. If a new hire refers another bus driver and they join the KCKPS District, the new hire who referred another bus driver will receive an additional $100 referral bonus.

Retired teachers wanted:

Retired teachers who join the KCKPS family will continue to receive their KPERS retirement benefits. Retired teachers must have met the KPERS waiting period. Once hired, KCKPS will pay for KPERS penalties and for medical and other benefits, if needed. Those who join the KCKPS District will also receive $1,500 signing bonus after 90 days.

Applications for all open positions are accepted at www.careers.kckps.org

The KCKPS District serves more than 20,000 students and their families in Wyandotte County, Kansas, and is one of the most diverse communities in the country.

  • Story from Kansas City, Kansas, Public Schools