1990-91 Kansas City Comets Yearbook from the Major Indoor Soccer League

Kansas City Comets (1981-1991)

Major Indoor Soccer League (1981-1990)
Major Soccer League (1990-1991)

Tombstone

Born: May 5, 1981 – The San Francisco Fog relocate to Kansas City1MISL Official Tenth Anniversary Guide 1978-1988
Folded: July 16, 19912Edwards, Kelly. “Clock strikes midnight on Comets”. The Daily News (Olathe, KS). July 17, 1991

First Game: November 13, 1981 (L 5-3 @ Denver Avalanche)
Last Game
: May 4, 1991 (L 7-6 @ Cleveland Crunch)

MISL Championships: None

Arena

Kemper Arena (15,925)31984-85 Major Indoor Soccer League Media Guide
Opened: 1974

Marketing

Team Colors: Fiery Orange & Strato Blue41984-85 Major Indoor Soccer League Media Guide

 

Television:

  • 1982-83: KCMO (CBS Channel 5 – 10 games)

Television Broadcasters:

  • 1982-83: Don Fortune & Jack Harry

Radio:

  • 1982-83: KCMO (810 AM)

Radio Broadcasters:

  • 1982-83: Kevin Wall

Ownership

Owners:

Attendance

The Comets set the all-time indoor soccer season attendance record during the winter of 1983-84 when they drew 378,864 fans for 24 home dates.

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Sources:

  • 1991-92 MSL Official Guide (1981-1991 Comets figures except 1984-85 season; 1981-1991 MISL league figures, except 1981-82 & 1983-84)
  • 1985-86 MISL Official Guide (1984-85 Comets figure)

Trophy Case

MISL Rookie-of-the-Year

  • 1985-86: Dave Boncek

MISL Coach-of-the-Year

  • 1982-83: Pat McBride
  • 1986-87: Dave Clements

 

Our Favorite Stuff

MISL Logo T-Shirt

This classic era Major Indoor Soccer League logo shirt is available from the guys at Cincinnati’s Old School Shirts in a variety of great styles:
  • Crewneck or hooded sweatshirts
  • Long-sleeve tee
  • 3/4 sleeve raglan
  • Women’s scoop neck
 
When you make a purchase through an affiliate link like this one, Fun While It Lasted earns a commission at no additional cost to you. Thanks for your support!

 

Background

Imagine if some upstart sport – a junk sport as some of the old cranks in the sporting press would call it – went into an big city arena next fall and outdrew the local NBA team. Not just outdrew the basketball club, but nearly doubled their average gate for each game and eventually drove them out of town.  It’s inconceivable that a sport like indoor lacrosse or arena football could blindside a city like this today. But this is exactly what happened in Kansas City in the early 1980’s with the arrival of the Major Indoor Soccer League.

The MISL was three years old when Dr. David Schoenstadt arrived in Kansas City in the summer of 1981.  Schoenstadt owned a sad sack two-year old franchise most recently known as the San Francisco Fog.  The club had already failed in Michigan (as the Detroit Lightning) and the Bay Area, lasting only a single winter in each city.  In Missouri, the Fog became the Kansas City Comets. They would split dates at the 16,000-seat Kemper Arena with the NBA’s Kansas City Kings.

Clive Griffiths of the Kansas City Comets on the cover of a 1983 Major Indoor Soccer League souvenir program

Lieweke Brothers

Schoenstadt entrusted the management of the Comets to the young brothers Tracey and Tim Lieweke.  Tracey was President, Tim General Manager and a third brother, Tod, ran the Comets’ community relations programs.  The Liewekes promoted Comets games as all-around entertainment events, augmented by light shows, lasers and pyrotechnics.  These production values are taken for granted today by NBA and NHL fans, but in the early 1980’s they were innovations still percolating upwards from leagues like the MISL (and often decried by old guard sportswriters of the era).

Comets vs. Kings

During the 1981-82 season, the Comets drew an announced average of 11,508 to the Kemper Arena for 22 home dates.  This was 2nd best in the 12-team MISL and, more importantly, the Comets popularity dwarfed that of the NBA’s Kings, who averaged a paltry 6,644 fans that winter.  Former Comets season ticket holder Brian Holland writes frequently about the Comets on his blog Holland’s Comet and compares Comets/Kings attendance for the four winters that the NBA and MISL went head-to-head in Kansas City from 1981 to 1985.  It was no contest, with the Comets reaching their peak of popularity in their third season of 1983-84, averaging a near capacity 15,786 while selling out 15 of 24 home dates.  According to Holland, the Comets even outdrew the NFL’s Kansas City Chiefs head-to-head during one weekend in December 1983.

By 1985, the Kansas City Kings season ticket base had eroded to just 3,200 seats.  In January, the Kings announced a relocation to Sacramento, California.  Their departure was attributed by some, including former Kings Head Coach Cotton Fitzsimmons, to simply being out-marketed by the Comets:

“Here’s something that’s not even a game,” said Fitzsimmons, quoted in The Houston Chronicle in April 1985. “They make up the rules as they go along.  But they’ve marketed aggressively and they’ve taken Kansas City by storm.”

1989-90 Kansas City Comets Yearbook from the Major Indoor Soccer League

Decline & Demise

With the Kings gone, the Comets became the primary tenant at Kemper Arena for the first time in the winter of 1985-86 and gained a stranglehold on prime dates.  Ironically, the fortunes of the Comets and the Major Indoor Soccer League had already started to decline.  The Lieweke brothers left Kansas City in 1984 at the zenith of the team’s popularity.  Younger brother Tim returned for two seasons as team President from 1986 to 1988, but by then the MISL was in contraction mode, as were the turnstile figures for the Comets.  The league nearly folded in the summer of 1988 after four teams folded.

David Schoenstadt, the rumpled anesthesiologist who brought the Comets to Kansas City in 1981, sold the club to an unwieldy group of 23 local investors in September 1987.   By the dawn of the 1990’s, announced attendance fell to an average of 7,103 per match, a decline or more than 50% from the club’s Reagan-era heyday.  The Comets folded after ten seasons on July 1991.  The MISL followed the Comets into the dustbin of history exactly one  year later.

 

Kansas City Comets Shop

 

 

Kansas City Comets Video

1991 Booster Club Highlight Video

 

1981 TV feature on the marketing of the Kansas City Comets.

 

Downloads

1987-88 MISL Rule Book & Schedule

1987-88 Major Indoor Soccer League Rule Book

 

Links

Major Indoor Soccer League Media Guides

Major Indoor Soccer League Programs 1978-1992

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Comments

4 Responses

  1. David Schoenstadt passed away December 16, 1991 to be exact. Comets MF Barry Wallace died on October 17, 2006, and two months later Comets F Carlos Salguero died on December 28th, 2006. All three died of cancer.

  2. “He’s (Schoenstadt) trying to get milk out of a cow already nursing three professional franchises and three Big Eight schools…Schoenstadt said the Comets must average 11,000 fans for 22 home dates to break even next season. It’s hard to imagine them averaging more than 6,000, given the strength of their competition and newness of their sport…It’s hard to envision the Comets prospering through the winter against the Kings and Big Eight basketball.”–naysayer Jonathan Rand, ‘K.C. Star’, May 6, 1981. Guess we prove Jon wrong, eh?

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