How this startup (and a KC sports icon) turned young players into card-carrying legends overnight
November 28, 2025 | Nikki Overfelt Chifalu
An Overland Park-based custom trading card company and a Kansas City soccer star are teaming up on the pitch with a goal to make youth sports fun again.
Stat Legend — launched by Chris Cheatham and Nick Weaver in 2023 — created custom cards for all 250 players who suit up for the Captains Soccer Club, which was started by Kansas City Sporting legend Matt Besler.

Custom, Pokemon-style trading cards created for young athletes; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News
“Youth sports have gotten really, really serious really early,” explained Cheatham, co-founder of now-exited RiskGenius. “That’s one of the things I like talking to Matt about because he agrees. So these cards are just like, ‘Hey, just have fun.’ This is a reminder that you can do big things later, and for now, just have fun.”
This is the first year for the Captains Club, and Overland Park-native Besler said he was looking for an opportunity to do something creative and unique for his players.
“I just want to create positive experience for these kids,” he explained. “So when we were starting the club, we brainstormed ways to get them excited about soccer.”
At a recent practice, each player received a pack of cards that included their own card, as well as cards for each of their teammates, a coach card, and a Besler card (with a picture of him as a youth player), totaling nearly 4,500 cards that Cheatham and Weaver created and printed.
“I hope that it’s a good memory for them,” Besler shared. “It’s almost like a mini yearbook that they can keep and hold on to for years to come. We just hope they have fun with them.”

Matt Besler smiles while distributing custom card packs from Stat Legend; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News
“If they want to collect them, if they want to put them in a binder, great,” he added, “If they want to frame them, great. If they want to autograph them and start trading them — whatever they want to do with them — that’s for them to decide.”
Cheatham and Weaver — with the help of a photographer — spent four practices interviewing and taking pictures of the players for the cards, which included a custom bio created with the help of AI.
“We’ve trained it to write this really awesome kid bio in like a Pokemon style,” Cheatham explained. “It would take specific things like one kid said he loved ramen and it referred to how he was going to slice through the defense like a knife through ramen.”
After excitedly receiving their cards, the players talked about bringing markers to their next practice to have teammates sign them and lined up to have Besler sign his card.

Matt Besler speaks with young athletes at a November practice; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News
“I’m really happy with how the cards turned out and I’m happy that we did this as a club,” Besler said. “The kids seemed really excited about it. So there’s a lot of buzz right now with the kids, and that’s really what it’s all about.”
“Give all the credit to Stat Legend and Chris,” he added. “They were the ones that did the heavy lifting, but pretty cool that we made it happen.”
A couple of years ago, Cheatham and Weaver were inspired to start Stat Legend to cheer up Cheatham’s son, they shared.
“My son was having a crappy baseball season,” explained Cheatham, a veteran Kansas City entrepreneur. “So I had somebody design a card for me and I think we started talking about printing. It was (Weaver’s) idea.”
Weaver knew of an on-demand printer through the board game community and the duo started exploring software applications to use to design the cards, they noted.
“It took us two and a half months to do 10 cards,” said Cheatham, who teased the company’s big plans for the 2026 World Cup. “And now we’re doing like 4,500 cards in a day.”

Matt Besler looks through packs of custom cards created by Stat Legend alongside co-founder Chris Cheatham; photo by Nikki Overfelt Chifalu, Startland News
After launching Stat Legend, Cheatham was introduced to Besler through a mutual friend and pitched the idea of the cards to him.
“I think right from the start, I was like, ‘Wow, this is a great idea,’” Besler recalled. “‘This is exactly the kind of thing that I’m looking to do, and exactly the type of company that I’m looking to partner with.’”
“I wanted to make this a part of my club not just this first year, but beyond that,” he added. “So I hope this can be a long term partnership.”

2025 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
Endeavor could bring its global capital network to KC startups; leaders weigh its local need
Leaders from the Heartland division of Endeavor on Monday gave local entrepreneurs a first look at capital, resources, and programming that could come to Kansas City as the global nonprofit considers expansion into the region. During the preview event, organized as part of Global Entrepreneurship Week, representatives from Endeavor’s regional office in Northwest Arkansas discussed…
Jason Sudeikis’ rockstar karaoke fantasy returns: Here’s why Thundergong! matters to homegrown ‘Ted Lasso’ star
Kansas City is the “secret sauce” in the recipes for Thundergong! and Big Slick, said Jason Sudeikis, who helps host the two high-profile events. The Overland Park native and “Ted Lasso” star was in Kansas City Friday to promote the annual Thundergong! fundraiser for Steps of Faith Foundation — returning Saturday at the Uptown Theater.…
Triple (stitched) threat: Olathe apparel shop brings design, sewing, printing in-house with shirts hitting store shelves soon
Adam Worrel’s vision for a fabric-to-finish apparel and screen printing business is finally sewing itself together — nearly 4,000 miles from where it began — with a label made in KC. First formulating the idea in 2010, he imagined creating a line with production and printing in-house and as much control over the supply chain as…
Why employers should hire veterans: KC entrepreneurs say combat prepared them for startup life
Effectively communicating the skills and experiences gained from military service can be a major challenge for veterans, said Zachary Oshinbanjo. Too often that disconnect contributes to unemployment or mental health struggles when a service member returns to civilian life. “Many veterans may have gone straight from high school into the military and now are looking…







