Play It Forward reunites South Kansas City-inspired brands, startup leaders
September 21, 2019 | Paul Cannon
A bright and sunny pre-autumn day silhouetted the shadows of basketball fans lining up last weekend to enter Smith-Hale Middle School. As the smells from a food truck and sounds of laughter filled the parking lot, players inside readied themselves for a South Kansas City showcase.
“We wanted to involve many entities that are directly working with our community,” said AbdulRasheed Yahaya, founder of Local Legends Gaming and one of the two entrepreneur organizers of the annual Play It Forward charity basketball event. “From our DJs to our hosts to our vendors. People are working hard in our community.”
“We don’t charge any of our vendors to be vendors,” he added. “Entrepreneurship is hard enough as it is. If we can give them the opportunity to grow, they too will improve the community.”
Now in its second year, the game benefits the Hickman Mills (HMC 1) School District’s school supplies fund and pits Yahaya, a Ruskin High School alum, against Hickman veteran Mark Launiu, co-founder of MADE MOBB and the other organizer of the event.
“We have a passion to give back to the city through athletics,” said Yahaya.
“This is our stomping grounds,” Launiu added.
Click here to read more about the origins of Play It Forward.
Supplying support
Both organizers are also co-founders of The Distrikc, an initiative led by black entrepreneurs to effect real change from within their own communities. Play It Forward preceded that effort but echoes its goals.
“If we can use our experiences to alleviate [longstanding South Kansas City challenges], that would go a long way in helping others,” said Yahaya.
Working with the financially strapped, but “incredibly cooperative” Hickman Mills district has been key, the organizers said. Admission and T-shirt sales at the event, as well as general donations, are tallied and used to provide classroom or related school items to students who lack them, Yahaya said.
“So when the young ones don’t have supplies, they can go to the office and say, ‘I don’t have this.’ Then they can be supplied with things like backpacks,” he said.

Play It Forward 2019
Room for a larger team
With a hip hop DJ performing throughout the game, Play It Forward featured a number of surprises that made the event far from a gimmick, its organizers said. Former college players, startup leaders like Healthy Hip Hop’s Roy Scott, and even celebrity WNBA player and national champion Tyra White joined in the action.
Launiu’s MADE MOBB squad — which boasted White — ultimately defeated Yahaya’s Local Legends Gaming team 62-50.
“They had better players, but we had better coaching,” Launiu joked.
The duo hopes to continue the charity basketball tradition into 2020 and beyond — perhaps with a few changes, they said.
“Professional refs?” Yahaya said, ribbing Launiu after the game. “There is always room for improvement. We want to tie in more nonprofits. Some that are really into the community.”
While the University of Missouri-Kansas City and Mid-Continent Public Library were among the vendors at the event, Yahaya and Launiu see opportunity to grow the event — and its impact — with support from other entrepreneurs and support organizations, they said.
This story is possible thanks to support from the Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation, a private, nonpartisan foundation that works together with communities in education and entrepreneurship to create uncommon solutions and empower people to shape their futures and be successful.
For more information, visit www.kauffman.org and connect at www.twitter.com/kauffmanfdn and www.facebook.com/kauffmanfdn
Featured Business

2019 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
KC Chamber, businesses: We won’t back down from DEI initiatives; city’s top diversity advocates honored
LeAna Flores knows those three little letters — DEI — can trigger a lot of people these days, she said. “For me, as a DEI (Diversity, Equity and Inclusion) practitioner, I live and breathe by this quote — especially in the climate that we have right now — ‘They tried to bury us, but they…
‘We are each other’s bootstraps’: Pay-It-Forward cafe says pressure to serve neighbors is back
The reopening of Thelma’s Kitchen — a pay-it-forward restaurant on Troost Avenue — not only flips the menu on the “soup kitchen” concept, but serves as an anchor of compassionate, community-focused care in the face of neighborhood gentrification, said Father Justin Mathews. “We view what we’re doing here as kind of like urban acupressure,” said…
KC-infused Rally Gin pours capital investment into plans for expanding the brand south
A liquor brand distilled from the vision of three Kansas City natives is expanding to Texas after landing national exposure and a key investment meant to elevate minority-owned spirit and beverage companies. Tim McCoy, co-founder of Rally Gin, shared his excitement and the impact of capital investment firm Pronghorn’s backing. “Pronghorn is just awesome. Their…
Union Station tapped for GEWKC base camp; training for treps arrives Nov. 19-21 in KC
When GEWKC pulls into Kansas City this fall, the metro’s largest educational entrepreneurship event will be stationed within one of the community’s crown jewels — a link to the past that points to a brighter future for the regions’ innovators, said Chante Keller. KCSourceLink on Thursday formally announced Union Station as the 2024 base camp…

