Kansas City’s new stadium is another sign of the NWSL’s rising standards – Equalizer Soccer

baptiste-giabiconi  > futball >  Kansas City’s new stadium is another sign of the NWSL’s rising standards – Equalizer Soccer
0 Comments

Photo showing the view from suite level of CPKC Stadium in Kansas City.


Photo provided by Kansas City Current

There is no better tangible sign of growth for the National Women’s Soccer League than the new stadium in Kansas City Current which will open its doors for the first time on March 16.

CPKC Stadium is an 11,500-seat soccer park built on the banks of the Missouri River specifically for the Kansas City Current. It is not, despite marketing and reports that suggest otherwise, the first stadium ever built for a women’s soccer team; the now-defunct Atlanta Beat constructed a stadium in partnership with a local university in 2011. That doesn’t take away from the significance, nor the relative grandeur, of what the world is about to witness in Kansas City.

For starters, it is almost entirely privately financed. Co-owners Angie and Chris Long are co-founders of an investment firm that stakes claim to $29 billion in managed investments; they operate in dollars, not feelings. They decided that building a stadium — and a new training complex, which opened in 2022 — was a worthwhile investment, period. They say they believe their investment is indicative of the rapidly rising business state of women’s soccer.

Access the best women’s soccer coverage all year long

Start your FREE, 7-day trial of The Equalizer Extra for industry-leading reporting and insight on the USWNT, NWSL and beyond.



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *