College athletics might be paused, but Esports is playing its long game (from home)
April 6, 2020 | Austin Barnes
Editor’s note: The following is part of Startland News’ ongoing coverage of the impact of Coronavirus (COVID-19) on Kansas City’s entrepreneur community, as well as how innovation is helping to drive a new normal in the ecosystem. Click here to follow related stories as they develop.
Traditional sports are sidelined these days; a result of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) era. But in their absence, the growing world of Esports could score big with fans.
“You won’t find [sports] on ESPN so much anymore,” laughed Toby Ebel, Esports coach at Baker University in Baldwin City, Kansas.
“But you can find it on sites like Twitch.tv and on YouTube and on Facebook,” he continued, highlighting an opportunity for fans of such sports as baseball and basketball to tap into something new with their freetime and embrace the world of Esports.
From Super Smash Brothers to Madden NFL to Fortnite, there’s an Esport for everyone. And the 30 joystick athletes on Baker’s Esports team haven’t missed a beat in a time of social distancing and Stay At Home orders, Ebel said.
“A number of them have started independent competitions just to keep their skills up, because we know this is going to come to an end someday and we’re going to get back into the classroom, back into the arena,” he said, noting members of one the program’s teams have all gone home to different states — but are still competing as a unit, as if they were side-by-side.
“They’re still involved in competitions. They played [twice this week.] So it’s been kind of fun to see that we can still do those things and we can still stream those things,” Ebel said. “For those sports junkies that are interested in something, they should be able to find it.”
Click here to read more about the Baker Esports program.
While the program might be seeing an uptick in support during a period of quarantine, it’s rise on college campuses isn’t completely new, Ebel explained, noting it’s become an increasingly reliable recruitment tool for Baker.
“We announced a program last March and I started recruiting right then, trying to get ready for the fall,” he recalled of the process which ultimately snagged the school five new enrollments.
“25 other kids that are on the program roster are all current students at Baker. And as soon as we announced [the program,] I started getting flooded with calls and emails saying, ‘Hey, I didn’t know Baker had an Esports team, I’d like to take part; I play this game.’”
Baker became the eighth school in the state to join the National Association of College Esports, alongside Kansas Wesleyan University, McPherson College, University of Saint Mary, Pratt Community College, Wichita State University, Central Christian College of Kansas and Ottawa University.
An unexpected twist in the program’s launch: students who’d already committed to playing other sports at Baker wanted in on Esports too, Ebel said.
“There’s a lot of crossover … I’ve got football players on the team. I’ve got soccer players. I’ve got track and cross country folks, wrestlers, golfers, tennis players — a wide range,” he said, noting the program is also a coed athletic opportunity.
“It reaches a broader, interesting subsection that I’m not so sure administrators knew was there,” Ebel theorized.
Baker University is set to host the inaugural Sunflower State Games Esports July 11 and July 18, welcoming the top players in Kansas to its Esports arena.
“Our Rocket League team, our top three players in that one, are all current students at Baker. Those are not recruited players and they’re good enough to compete at the national level. They were just sitting here at Baker.”
Less than a year into its tenure, Baker’s Esports program is no stranger to titles. So far, the Fortnite team has claimed first place in their conference — fourth in the nation — and gone up against Boise State, the premier Esports school in the U.S., Ebel said.
“I mean, you should just see these kids, they’re growing and beaming and having a great time because they know that they’re competing against schools like that and against schools that offer full ride scholarships.”
Such a streak of success will hopefully continue when the world is off pause, he added. Baker is set to host the inaugural Sunflower State Games Esports July 11 and July 18, welcoming the top players in Kansas to its Esports arena.
“They had never had Esports as a compensation opportunity before, but they had seen that other states had done it,” he said, using New York as an example. “We’re hopeful that we’ll see [30 teams] participate in the tournament and get to know Baker.”
Participants must be at least 14, which the school hopes will help increase its high school recruitment efforts, Ebel said.
“Whether it be a young adult who’s thinking about coming to school and seeing an opportunity for a varsity scholarship or a 30-year-old who just happens to be really good at Rocket League … they can see our arena, they can talk to us and they can spread the word,” he said.
Featured Business

2020 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Kansas City Developers Conference cultivates community among techies
Hundreds of hardcore techies are gearing up for one of Kansas City’s largest gatherings of developers. The eighth-annual Kansas City Developers Conference is expecting more than 1,300 attendees from regional corporations, startups and universities on June 22. With a focus on building the Kansas City community, the conference features loads of workshops, panel discussions and…
From Slavic studies to coding, LaunchCode helps Kansas Citian find new career
It’s been in Kansas City only four months, but LaunchCode is already making an impact. The St. Louis-based non-profit organization arrived in February to grow Kansas City’s tech sector by organically building its pool of talent. LaunchCode helps educate locals with an interest in changing careers to work in tech, and then connects them with…
CEO: Kansas’ politics pushed Pathfinder Innovations into Missouri
Destructive economic and social policies in Kansas compelled Pathfinder Health Innovations’ move to the Show Me State, its founder wrote in a blog post critical of state leaders. A tech service provider for people with autism, Pathfinder received tax incentives for its border hop to Missouri but Pathfinder CEO Jeff Blackwood said the move also…
WonderWe launches faith-based crowdfunding platform
Kansas City-based software startup WonderWe hopes to tap a specific market for its new faith-based crowdfunding platform. Launched in early June, WonderWe combines faith-based values, the latest in crowdfunding tech and new proprietary features to “be one of the leading names” in crowdfunding, said Dominic Ismert, founder of WonderWe. The platform currently accepts fundraisers for…


