Team behind KC Current, CPKC Stadium honored as Entrepreneurs of the Year

December 2, 2023  |  Taylor Wilmore

Angie and Chris Long, co-owners of the Kansas City Current, CPKC Stadium and Palmer Square Capital Management, are presented with UMKC’s Kansas City Entrepreneur of the Year Award; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News

Chris and Angie Long scored another big win Thursday — joining the roster of Kansas Citians honored as UMKC’s Entrepreneurs of the Year — amid an evening that celebrated the world of athletics and the leaders who make the KC sports scene shine. 

“We feel very proud that we have set a bar,” said Angie Long, co-owner of the Kansas City Current, as well as CPKC Stadium, the first purpose-built women’s professional sports stadium. “Everyone is now raising their game and aiming to be that.”

The Henry W. Bloch School of Management at University of Kansas City-Missouri brought the Longs to the Copaken Stage at H&R Block’s World Headquarters in downtown Kansas City Thursday for a salute to their ongoing contributions.

The couple received recognition for introducing their National Women’s Soccer League franchise to Kansas City. They were also honored for their achievements with Palmer Square Capital Management, overseeing $29 billion assets under management.

“We get to lead two amazing organizations, both of which have powerful platforms to be a positive force on a global basis,” said Chris Long.

Chris Long speaks Oct. 27 during a fireside chat with ACG Kansas City (Association for Corporate Growth); photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News

Palmer Square kick start

“The Kansas City Current would not exist without Palmer Square and the massive success that it has had,” Chris Long said Oct. 27 during a fireside chat with ACG Kansas City (Association for Corporate Growth).

Angie and Chris Long speak after being honored with UMKC’s Kansas City Entrepreneur of the Year Award; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News

Chris Long is the founder of Palmer Square Capital Management, an asset manager focused on corporate and structured credit; Angie Long serves as chief investment officer and one of two principal owners of Palmer Square.

“Investing is so important, if done right,” said Chris Long during their Thursday acceptance speech at the Copaken Stage. “We’ve been very fortunate to have this team of people around us that have driven incredible investment performance.” 

Founded in 2009 with two employees handling $10 million in assets, the Mission Woods-based company has now grown to 59 employees managing about $29 billion. 

Chris Long also serves on the boards of the Kansas City Sports Commission and the Greater Kansas City Community Foundation.

“It’s a multiplier effect,” said Chris Long when touching on how his work is creating a positive impact on clients by giving them financial freedom and in return, having clients feel more secure and charitable toward the community.

“We do a lot with the endowment world,” he said. “If you do a great job for them (higher education), they’d be more secure with their budgets, and they feel more secure with their capital expenditures.”

“It’s a lucrative job, we feel very fortunate for that. We took a lot of that capital and put it right back in this community by starting the Kansas City Current,” the duo said.

Click here to follow the KC Current on Instagram.

Focused on the (KC) Current

Angie and Chris Long took a risk by purchasing and relocating the KC Current team in the heart of the pandemic, they said, but they knew that creating a major platform to elevate women’s sports was well worth it.

Angie and Chris Long offer their acceptance speech for UMKC’s Kansas City Entrepreneur of the Year Award; photo by Taylor Wilmore, Startland News

“We had a full view coming from an investment background on what the reward can be not only from a monetary perspective, but for this community, and what it would mean to have those female role models right in our backyard,” said Chris Long at the ACG event in October.

RELATED: Designed by women, for athletes: How the woman-led team behind KC Current’s new stadium is ‘equalizing the playing field’ for women’s sports 

The pair, alongside Patrick and Brittney Mahomes, co-own the $118 CPKC million stadium at Kansas City’s Berkley Riverfront. 

“It’s fulfilling. We spent the first 25 years of our career, being stewards of capital for institutions and families, and now we are stewards of a community asset,” said Angie Long.

The couple has ambitious plans for the CPKC stadium, targeting a baseline 60 to 80 events yearly, spanning NCAA, FIFA, concerts, rugby, lacrosse, and hosting major events like the mayor’s conference and a national women and leadership group.

Five fields, with FIFA Level 1 concussion pads, are already available for public use. Soft openings for the team are expected this month. 

“We’re really proud of what we have accomplished to this point. But we really feel like we’re just getting started,” said Chris Long.

 

View this post on Instagram

 

A post shared by Kansas City Current (@kccurrent)

David L. Johnson, founder of Chicken N Pickle, speaks after being awarded the Marion and John Kreamer Award for Social Entrepreneurship from UMKC; photo by Taylor Wilmore, Startland News

Thursday’s Entrepreneur of the Year event also shined the spotlight on Marcelo Claure, founder and CEO of Claure Group and Brightstar, who was honored as the Henry W. Bloch International Entrepreneur of the Year. Claure led Kansas City-based Sprint from 2014 to 2018, overseeing the company’s merger with T-Mobile. He continues to hold a seat on the board of T-Mobile.

David L. Johnson, founder of Chicken N Pickle and CEO of Maxus Realty Trust, received the Marion and John Kreamer Award for Social Entrepreneurship from UMKC. 

Lesly Romo, a junior in business administration and bilingual real estate agent professional, was celebrated as UMKC Student Entrepreneur of the Year.

RELATED: UMKC’s Student Entrepreneur of the Year sees business potential in KC’s diverse futbol ecosystem

 

startland-tip-jar

TIP JAR

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

<span class="writer-title">Taylor Wilmore</span>

Taylor Wilmore

Taylor Wilmore, hailing from Lee’s Summit, is a dedicated reporter and a recent graduate of the University of Missouri, where she earned her Bachelor’s degree in Journalism. Taylor channels her deep-seated passion for writing and storytelling to create compelling narratives that shed light on the diverse residents of Kansas City.

Prior to her role at Startland News, Taylor made valuable contributions as a reporter for the Columbia Missourian newspaper, where she covered a wide range of community news and higher education stories.

2023 Startups to Watch

    stats here

    Related Posts on Startland News

    Travis Kelce and Operation Breakthrough student outside the future Ignition Lab, powered by Eighty-Seven & Running

    Sneak peek: See the vision for Travis Kelce’s ‘safe haven’ for Operation Breakthrough teens

    By Tommy Felts | May 21, 2021

    When Operation Breakthrough’s new Ignition Lab opens in the fall, the former muffler shop on Troost Avenue is expected to offer hands-on, practical training to young people who have aged out of the early education center’s MakerCity program. Media members were offered a first look at plans for the space — powered by Chiefs Super…

    George Tsatsos, Dakota Hendrickson, Carver Gertsberger, Carlos Selva and Johnny Wermers, Filti

    How a former Sprint car driver’s quick pivot from HVAC filters to face masks put a North KC startup atop the nanofiber scoreboard

    By Tommy Felts | May 20, 2021

    Filti was less than weeks away from launching its state-of-the-art residential HVAC filter when the Coronavirus began its rapid spread throughout the U.S., Dakota Hendrickson recalled. Noticing a significant dip — yet high demand — for face masks, the former race car driver altered the company’s course. “Never in a million years did I think…

    Grant Burcham Ryan Tillman, CyTek Corporation

    Former Mobank CEO, Cerner leader acquire, join longstanding KC tech company

    By Tommy Felts | May 18, 2021

    A dramatic change at a Kansas City a computer IT support and managed services firm is expected to bring expanded vision and executive direction with the addition of two top tech leaders who also now own the business, the company announced Tuesday. CyTek Corporation, founded in 1998, has been acquired by former Mobank CEO Grant…

    Rod Malchow, R&P Camel Co.

    Far from fenced-in city life: Rural Missouri camel rancher takes a trail less ridden

    By Tommy Felts | May 18, 2021

    After 35-plus years ranching camels at the foot of the Ozarks, Rod Malchow expressed no regrets about spending more than half his life with exotic animals on a remote Missouri farm — often seeing only his wife, sister and neighbors unless traveling to events offering camel rides. “If I fell over dead tomorrow, I’d have…