Chiefs' Patrick Mahomes among those
trying to land WNBA team for Kansas City in 2028 expansion
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[November 01, 2024]
By DAVE SKRETTA
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes and the
rest of the ownership group of the Kansas City Current, who play in
the National Women's Soccer League, have been meeting with WNBA
officials a bout bringing an expansion franchise to the city.
Mahomes confirmed the talks Thursday, saying that it was a
“no-brainer” to try to bring women's hoops to Kansas City.
“Obviously, we want to get basketball in Kansas City in general,”
said Mahomes, who also has ownership stakes in the Royals and MLS
club Sporting Kansas City. “You talk about the University of Kansas
basketball, the Chiefs, whatever it is, the city is going to come
out to the stadium. It's cool we were able to get the women's soccer
team here and you see the support they have.”
The Current, who play in a $117 million purpose-built stadium near
downtown Kansas City, have regularly sold out their home matches
this season. They begin the NWSL playoffs as the No. 4 seed on Nov.
9 after losing just three times all season.
Mahomes and his wife, Brittany — a former soccer player — frequently
attend Current and Sporting KC matches. The Chiefs quarterback was
in a suite at Kauffman Stadium a few weeks ago to watch the Royals
play the Guardians in the playoffs.
“I think more than anything, I know how much sports has given to
me,” said Mahomes, whose unbeaten Chiefs play Tampa Bay on Monday
night. “Whenever I'm done with football — whenever that is — and I
have to venture into life after football, and chase kids around, I
want to still be a part of it. Hopefully, we can get this WNBA team
here, for life after football, so I can make an impact in sports,
and show my daughter that you can chase your dream, whatever dream
that is.”
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Kansas City Chiefs quarterback Patrick Mahomes (15) throws during
the second half of an NFL football game against the Las Vegas
Raiders Sunday, Oct. 27, 2024, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/John Locher)
The WNBA is expanding by three teams over the next
two seasons with Golden State, Portland and Toronto pushing the
total number of franchises to 15. And while league commissioner
Cathy Engelbert has said the WNBA would like to add a 16th team by
the 2028 season, Kansas City is expected to have competition from
St. Louis, Philadelphia and several other cities.
The league has been buoyed by young stars such as Caitlin Clark and
Angel Reese, drawing its best attendance numbers in 22 years this
past season. Game 5 of its championship peaked at 3.3 million TV
viewers, the most-watched WNBA game in a quarter of a century, plus
22 telecasts during the 40-game regular season topped at least a
million viewers across various networks.
Kansas City has long had the infrastructure for a professional
basketball franchise, building the T-Mobile Center in 2007 with the
hopes of luring an NBA or NHL club to town. Those teams never
materialized, but the building has remained busy hosting concerts
and other sports events, including the Big 12 men's and women's
basketball tournaments each March.
Mahomes believes a WNBA franchise would be the perfect fit for the
downtown arena.
“They want to expand. Just like any other business, you have to pick
and choose how,” he said. “Obviously, you've seen the last few years
the WNBA has grown. We feel like Kansas City is a great place to
continue that growth, but we have to battle other cities to show
them that this is the right place.”
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