Back in 2018, I visited the Municipal Auditorium in Kansas City to see the UMKC Kangaroos, who were playing their last season in that venerable venue before moving back to Swinney Recreation Center on campus. During the following offseason, they announced that they would also return to the Summit League and rebranded their athletic teams as the Kansas City Roos, focusing more on being the city's athletics team. The new logo is below and it is a significant improvement, but it hasn't led to a massive increase in attendance, mostly because fans don't attend college games due to a brand, but because they are alumni or students. Or sports travellers such as myself.
As I am on a quest to see all regularly used Division I home gyms, I had to return to Kansas City to add Swinney to my list. My daughter accompanied me along with my friend and her son and we drove onto campus, located just south of the Plaza, which makes for a good pregame area if you have time (Jack Stack BBQ is less than 20 minutes away on foot). I found a free spot on Cherry Street about two minutes away from the venue, but there is also covered parking in a nearby garage, where you need to download an app and pay $1.25 per hour, so it wasn't like I was saving the big bucks like I did the day before at Arrowhead. We walked to the back of the building on the south side, passing by a kangaroo statue along the way (below). This entrance is usually reserved for students, but the receptionist told us to walk down a narrow hall to reach the gym, which we did, passing by the coaching offices along the way.
Below is the main entrance on the north side, with the box office just inside to the right. Tickets start at $10, but as I was with friends, I did not ask for the cheapest, instead paying an extra $7 to sit in the front row. The venue opened in 1941 and has a capacity of 1,500, making it about 10% of the size of Mizzou Arena.
Inside, there are a couple of panels highlighting both athletic and academic achievements, but the one that I found most interesting describes the history of the kangaroo mascot, unique among sports teams at the college level, if not everywhere outside Australia. In 1939, Walt Disney, who lived in Kansas City during his youth, drew the first mascot, who was known as Kasey the Kangaroo at the time. This article details the evolution of the mascot since then.
There is not much else to see in the lobby, so I entered the gym itself, and just like Northern Colorado and many other small venues, you are immediately at the corner of the floor.
There are only two seating areas, one on each sideline, with 14 rows across four sections; there are no bad seats here. The band sits in the leftmost section in the photo below, while the student section is one over and known as the Rowdy Roos. If you want to be on TV, sit on that side as all cameras are on the side from which I took the photo below.
This was my first Summit League game, and I took a picture of a few of the other logos in the conference, all places I still have to go (below). There are only two banners here, both for the women's 2019-20 season when they were declared the WAC champs after winning the regular season and then having the conference tournament cancelled after one day; their inclusion in the NCAA tournament that wasn't held is also commemorated.
There are two scoreboards on either end of the court, one with the score and player stats, the other rotates two pages of team stats and is one of the best I have seen. It is a really good way to keep track of the game, as you can see FG%, 3P%, turnovers, assists, rebounds, and all the other stats that make basketball so fascinating. Of course, it was so fascinating that I forgot to take a picture of it.
The KC skyline is still on the floor, though tough to see from this side of the gym, and I never did move to the other side to take a better picture.
One of the problems with being in the first row is that the courtside seats partially block your view, but this is not much of an issue once the action starts given that the players are pretty tall.
The single concession stand has limited options at reasonable prices, and they seemed to give away popcorn after the game was over. One thing to note is that the venue is entirely cashless, something that is getting more and more common, even at these smaller places.
Overall, Swinney is a major step down from the Municipal Auditorium, at least aesthetically, but you can't blame the program for bringing games back to campus where they belong. I suspect most winter sports tourists in KC are there for the Chiefs, but they should not overlook the Roos, who put on a good show and are much, much more affordable.
The Game
The South Dakota State Jackrabbits were in town for this makeup game, as the original fixture was scheduled for December 21 (I saw Colorado that day), but postponed due to Winter Storm Elliot. Both teams were 6-4 in conference play.
Kansas City had a very interesting starting lineup, particularly namewise, with 6'9 twins Precious and Promise Idiaru (born in Germany to Nigerian parents, they have a younger sister Peace) accompanying Shemarri Allen and RayQuawndis Mitchell. The fifth starter was Jeff Ngandu (above), who hails from the DRC but played prep at Orangeville in Ontario, and then was unable to join Seton Hall last season due to visa issues exacerbated by the pandemic. College hoops has the most interesting backstories, especially with so many international players these days.
Anyway, KC was brutal (brootal?) to start, missing their first seven shots as the Jackrabbits raced to a 12-1 lead. That advantage held up until near the end of the half, when the Roos rallied with a 9-1 run of their own and the game was still close at the break, with SDSU up 39-32.
The second half saw KC get within a point after an Allen hoop and harm, and then the teams went nearly three minutes without scoring. Both finally got back on the board by trading jumpers and then Mitchell sank a three to give the Roos their first lead at 49-47 with just under 12 minutes to go. Things remained tight and the game was tied at 59 at the final media timeout. A couple of Allen free throws were answered by a Zeke Mayo triple for the visitors; Babacar Diallo then contributed two for KC, only for Matt Mims to go one better with an unbelievable buzzer-beating bank shot to make it a 66-64 for SDSU. Allen got that right back to give the Roos a 1-point bulge with 37 seconds left.
The Jackrabbits held the ball and then Mayo drove to the basket where he was fouled by Diallo. Mayo made both freebies, leaving KC 12 seconds to make one final shot for the win. Two timeouts were taken by coach Marvin Menzies, but they seemed like a waste as the play they ran was awful, with Allen attempting a jumpback shot from the wing. Above you can see everybody watching the ball; it missed and went out off a Jackrabbit, giving the Roos one second to perform a miracle. Mitchell's inbounds pass was high over the hoop and Allen came flying in for the one-handed jam, but he couldn't quite control the ball, which went off the backboard, hit the rim, and bounced harmlessly away, allowing the Jackrabbits to escape with a frenetic 67-66 victory.
KC finished 3-19 from long range, dooming them to defeat. Mayo was the leading scorer with 24 points, while Allen finished with 23 in the loss. There were eight lead changes and four ties, with most of those coming down the stretch, making this a very entertaining affair. The highlights are here and worth a look for that final play that would have made ESPN had it succeeded.
Notes
Regular readers know how much I value hard tickets and if you check out this beauty below, you should understand why. A permanent souvenir of a very memorable evening that cost nothing, quite literally, as it was the GA ticket for my daughter. The fact that billion-dollar organizations can't do something like this for the fans that want it is just another stain on the sporting landscape that is increasingly filled with them.
Of the 32 conferences, I have yet to see home games in five: Big South, MAC, MEAC, Ohio Valley, and Southland. I will visit New Orleans in two weeks to get the last while the rest will have to wait until next season. I have seen two Sun Belt schools, but UT Arlington left for the WAC, while Georgia State opened a new venue this season, so I have no active venues in that conference either. It is almost a full-time job keeping track of all these changes.
Next Up
Another weekend in the Midwest as I head to Nebraska to see all four D-I venues in the state. Check back for recaps next week.
Best,
Sean