KC Pioneers to their visiting Aussie players: Feel what it’s like to have an entire city behind you

April 4, 2023  |  Channa Steinmetz

Kansas City Pioneers’ Rocket League team; top: James Guarino, username JG7, coach; bottom: Hunter Tomeski, username Huntr, player; Ethan Klumpp, username Scrub, player; Jon Anastasakis, username Bananahead, player; photo courtesy of the KC Pioneers

Playing professional esports has given 17-year-old Ethan Klumpp an opportunity to travel the world; Kansas City has been one of the most livable cities he’s visited yet, he shared.

Ethan Klumpp, Kansas City Pioneers Rocket League team; photo courtesy of the KC Pioneers

“My experience in Kansas City, it’s different from the other U.S. cities that I’ve been in,” said Klumpp, an Australian who plays for the Kansas City Pioneers Rocket League team. “It’s a lot more chill. It’s not as busy with people around you at all times. You can live here. I can see myself living here more than [a place like] Los Angeles.” 

Click here to check out Kansas City’s premier esports organization, the KC Pioneers.

Three of the four team members on the KC Pioneers Rocket League team hail from Australia. For the first time since they joined the team, the Aussies were flown to Kansas City for a bootcamp ahead of the Rocket League Championship Series Winter Major Thursday through Sunday in San Diego, California.

KC Pioneers’ Rocket League team is currently ranked in the Top 16 Rocket League teams across the globe, noted Sam Kulikov, a co-founder of the KC Pioneers.

“Our Rocket League team competes in the Australian Rocket League Division, also known as the Oceania Region,” Kulikov said. “By representing a team from the Oceania Region, we are able to bring resources to smaller, under-developed regions in the Rocket League ecosystem and build up great teams in their early stages.” 

KC Pioneers is one of Startland News’ Startups to Watch in 2023! Click here to find out why.

RELATED: Royals announce gaming partnership with KC’s premier esports org: We share the same DNA

Kansas City Pioneers LEVELUP Arena; photo courtesy of the KC Pioneers

KC Pioneers Coach James Guarino, Kansas City Pioneers LEVELUP Arena; photo courtesy of the KC Pioneers

The Rocket League players started as early as 15 years old, Kulikov continued, noting that they have qualified for every Major event, including the World Championship, thus far.

Kulikov and his team felt passionately about bringing their players to Kansas City before San Diego so they could practice at a world-class facility, as well as intimately connect with the culture of the organization, he said.

“We wanted them to experience the power of the Midwest and the pride that we have when it comes to supporting our own,” Kulikov shared. “We wanted them to see and feel what it’s like to know you have an entire city behind you.”

“This is definitely the best bootcamp we’ve had so far,” Klumpp said, noting it feels good to be in the home of the KC Pioneers. “… This facility is amazing. It’s been really fun.”

Hunter Tomeski, Ethan Klumpp, and Jon Anastasakis, Kansas City Pioneers Rocket League team, at Chicken N Pickle; photo courtesy of the KC Pioneers

During the Rocket League team’s first trip to Kansas City, they visited iconic landmarks within the city and experienced such local favorites as a Kansas City Royals game at Kauffman Stadium over the baseball club’s opening weekend, pickleball at Chicken N Pickle, a shopping spree at MADE MOBB and lunch at Joe’s Kansas City Bar-B-Que.

“The thing I’ve looked forward to the most is the barbeque,” Klumpp said. “The barbeque gets really hyped by these guys. They say it’s the best barbeque in America. We had brisket yesterday, and I am not a big barbeque person, but that was pretty amazing.”

Click here to read about KC Pioneers’ partnership with the Kansas City Royals.

Jon Anastasakis, Kansas City Pioneers Rocket League team; photo courtesy of the KC Pioneers

Kulikov encouraged the Kansas City community to tune into the Rocket League Championship Series Winter Major this week and cheer on the KC Pioneers.

“We feel really good heading into the RLCS Winter Major,” Kulikov said. “We have a pretty tough group of some of the best teams in the world, but we know we have what it takes to make it to Championship Sunday. The boys are confident, excited and fueled by the support of the Midwest. They’re ready to take this trophy home.”

“We’re feeling confident,” Klumpp echoed. “You always have to be confident going into it.”

The Championship will be streamed Thursday through Sunday on Twitch at Twitch.tv/RLEsports.

To be a Kansas City Pioneer means to be excited about your city and the work you are contributing to it, Klumpp shared.

“The passion is here in the city,” Klumpp said, “and it shows in the organization as well.”

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

Did you enjoy this post? Show your support by becoming a member or buying us a coffee.

2023 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Here for the party: Mobile bar wants you to drink your brand (and its own laid-back, good-times vibe)

    By Tommy Felts | July 15, 2022

    A new mobile bar business wants to take the cockiness out of the cocktail scene. “There’s a lot of ego in the cocktail scene, but we think the bar should be a distraction,” said Brian Shellenberger, co-founder of runner! cocktails. “When you’re having a stressed out week, what do you do? You go to a…

    Look up for ‘King Me’: How Rif Raf Giraffe’s colorful new mural paints a full circle moment on this Crossroads corner 

    By Tommy Felts | July 15, 2022

    The chaos created by an unexpected building collapse that sent Jason Harrington’s East Crossroads apartment crumbling to the pavement below ultimately made room for an even larger canvas, said the famed graffiti artist also known as Rif Raf Giraffe. In 2018, the building now home to King G — a neighborhood bar and deli —…

    Fully funded in less than 6 hours: KC-stitched Yardball reinvents the game of catch, nearly doubles Kickstarter goal

    By Tommy Felts | July 13, 2022

    Chad Hickman has experienced how easy it is to get lost in a deep conversation while playing a game of catch, he shared.  “When your only goal is to throw something back and forth, you can really open up in a conversation and focus on the now. You’re not worried about other things. I used…

    Kansas City corporate leader works to take ClimateTech from research to the real world 

    By Tommy Felts | July 13, 2022

    The solar canopy at Operation Breakthrough’s high-profile STEM lab and youth coworking space was an opportunity for Black & Veatch to put one of the firm’s core capabilities to use for the community and the climate, said Ilya Tabakh. “[Our goal was] to support an initiative that supports STEM education, combines sustainability and technology, and…