Beach volleyball heavyweights, Olympians hitting KC sand for George Brett showdown
September 9, 2025 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
Serial entrepreneur Lance Windholz hopes a high-profile weekend beach volleyball tournament — showcasing 24 professional players, including seven Olympians — will encourage more Kansas City athletes and enthusiasts to dig the sport he loves.
The George Brett 4v4 Volleyball Showdown arrives Saturday, Sept. 13, at Shawnee Mission Beach Volleyball. Two amateur teams are set to compete alongside six elite teams, featuring Olympians Phil Dalhausser, Taylor Crabb, Taylor Sander, Nick Lucena, Chase Budinger, Alex Ranghieri, and Carli Lloyd.
Windholz, owner of the beach volleyball complex in Shawnee, aims to make it an annual event, he said. For the inaugural showdown, he’s teamed with AVP Hall of Famer Steve Obradovich and Kansas City Royals legend George Brett.
“If you are even somewhat interested in volleyball, and you come watch these games, you’re going to fall in love with the sport,” Windholz said. “It’s like a heavyweight boxing match with just big plays back and forth, such a fast tempo. So what we want is to just make more fans of the game.”
“This is the highest level of volleyball in America and it’s coming to KC,” he added. “I think that’s just really cool.”
Click here to purchase tickets for the George Brett 4v4 Volleyball Showdown.
Beach volleyball is a sport on the rise at the national level, Windholz noted.
“You’ve got the AVP Beach that’s growing,” he continued. “You have indoor professional leagues that are growing. Colleges are expanding scholarships to include beach now, even several in the Kansas area. So there’s just a lot more opportunities to play at the next level.”
When Windholz bought Shawnee Mission Beach Volleyball in 2023, he said, he wanted to bring more professional events to the facility. Then through “dumb luck,” he connected with Obradovich — a professional beach volleyball player in the 1970s and 1980s — who runs a similar tournament in Newport Beach.
“It was just a way to help these players make some money, grow the sport that he played and loved, and just kind of give back,” he explained. “After doing that, he knew he wanted to expand it.”
Obradovich also happens to be childhood friends with Brett, Windholz noted. So when looking for places to take the tournament, Kansas City came to mind. Then when Obradovich saw the eight-acre Shawnee beach facility, which features 18 volleyball courts, a full service bar and grill and a two-tier courtside deck, a partnership was formed.
“He was like, ‘This is incredible; this is awesome,” Windholz recalled. “”You have all the courts right here. You got this whole deck for a VIP area. This is amazing. I’m going to bring this to Kansas City.’”
On top of the 24 professional players, there will be eight amateur players — one men’s team and one women’s team — competing, after they won a qualifying tournament in August.
“They get to play in front of all the fans against the best in the world and test their skills,” Windholz said. “It’s going to be intense. The pros are not holding back.”
”For those amateurs to play against people they watch on TV, their idols and Olympians, it’s pretty awesome,” he added.
Food trucks, vendors, a kids area with bounce houses, and a pros vs. joes area — where fans can test their skills against the professionals — are planned.
“We’re super excited,” Windholz noted. “We’re really bringing a new professional sport to Kansas City. These are Olympians, and people who have won major AVP tournaments this year. So really the best in the country are coming out to do a one day tournament for us. It’s gonna be awesome.”

2025 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
‘This is the end of The Sundry’ — Sustainable food problem remains after startup’s closing, founder says
The Sundry market-and-restaurant concept at Plexpod Westport Commons simply wasn’t solving the problems of scope and scale within sustainable and local agriculture as intended, said Ryan Wing. Ultimately, that meant the venture itself couldn’t continue as originally envisioned, added Wing, founder of the sustainable food startup, which abruptly closed to the public last week. “Expectations…
First couple of KC Dapper Rap launching first-of-its-kind coworking space for city’s urban core
A new self-style space in Midtown is expected to offer hair, beauty and wellness entrepreneurs an opportunity to cowork under one roof without the burden of securing financing or paying for utilities, said Lauren Euston. “If you are a busy stylist or busy wellness professional and you are working hard to reach the next level…
The Prospect: ‘Cutthroat Kitchen’ winner on the move with chef-inspired workforce training
Everyday consumers can elevate Kansas City through the simple of act of eating a meal, said Chef Shanita McAfee-Bryant. Her in-the-works non-profit urban eatery concept — The Prospect — caters to a marketplace hungry for culinary-oriented workforce development training: students looking for a window into entrepreneurship through cooking, said Bryant, 2014 winner of Food Network’s…
BacklotCars parks another $25 million in Series B round led by NY-based investor
KC-fueled BacklotCars will further its mission to disrupt the wholesale automotive space, thanks to the close of a $25 million Series B funding round, the company announced Monday. Led by New York-based growth equity firm, Stripes, the round brings BacklotCars — which seeks to ease pain points for automotive wholesalers — to $38 million in…



