Category Archives: Sports

Kansas Sports Academy to locate at planned Caban Marketplace in Bel Aire

WICHITA — Developers of the planned Caban Marketplace along North Rock Road in Bel Aire are sharing specifics for one phase of the potentially 580-acre development.

Tom Blitz of Shopping Center Development & Consulting says there are plans for a $22 million, 220,000-square-foot Kansas Sports Academy that would locate south of Highway 254 and north of the new Bel Aire high school.

He says the complex will have 17 full-size basketball courts, 25 volleyball courts, eight tennis courts and three outdoor sand volleyball courts and be intended as a place to develop athletes.

“It’s more of an environment to bring in professional coaches and help train traveling teams,” Blitz says.

He says there also will be strength and speed training areas as well.

“This is an academy,” Blitz says. “Not just here’s a court and play.”

There are several developers behind Caban Marketplace. Blitz won’t say who is doing the Kansas Sports Academy.

“They are choosing to remain anonymous at the moment.”

In addition to sports venues, Caban Marketplace potentially will include retail stores, a water park/destination hotel and an aquarium among other things.

The size and scope of the project could be affected by whether the developers and city are able to get approval from the state to use sales and tax revenue bond financing, which is repaid using the state sales tax collected from businesses on site. The bonds would be used to build the project’s infrastructure.

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S&P Sports Complex grows from practice facility to multifaceted business

WICHITA — Auctioneer Bud Palmer’s hard-earned reputation as a curmudgeon is in jeopardy.

He and his daughter Shannon St. Vrain’s year-old S&P Sports Complex near 35th Street North and St. Francis is morphing into a multifaceted business, but that means word is going to get out why Palmer owns the building.

“The whole reason he got it was for the grandkids,” St. Vrain says of her six children, ages 2 to 12.

She says Palmer is too emotional to even discuss that part of it. She says she often bugged her father about helping transport her kids to practices, and she often lamented that there weren’t more places for them to practice and play.

“It’s hard to get schools because the school teams have priority first,” St. Vrain says. “We were practicing all over.”

Palmer was driving when he saw that a 1900s school at 3601 N. St. Francis was for sale.

“I just … called my broker and said, ‘Get it bought,’” he says.

His grandchildren were less than impressed since the school – which had a mid-century expansion to a sprawling 35,000 square feet – also had been a Salvation Army homeless shelter and then went unused for years. It was a mess.

“Grandpa said it was nice,” St. Vrain quotes her children, who were concerned upon seeing it.

“Grandpa has a vision,” she told them.

Palmer purchased the former Shocker basketball floor from the Kansas Coliseum and installed it in the school’s former gym.

Then, as he was cleaning, he discovered a second gym and bought the former St. Mary Cathedral gym floor and installed it.

“Well, everybody will rent it,’” Palmer assured his daughter.

That’s what’s happening.

They’ve created two indoor batting areas, and the spaces – along with the gyms – are open daily for teams to use. There’s volleyball, dodgeball, indoor soccer and homeschooling PE classes there. There’s interest from at least one Zumba class and a tae kwon do tournament for this summer.

Palmer also started holding auctions there. There are regular charity book sales. Now, St. Vrain also is renting the space for parties.

So far, it’s “just kind of word-of-mouth” renting, she says.

Now, photographer Pete Iseman is moving part of his business to the complex.

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BlueChip Spine & Sports Specialists plans east-side open house while also working on west-side space

WICHITA — Chiropractor Casey Hummel is having an open house next week for his new east-side BlueChip Spine & Sports Specialists and is working on opening a west-side location next month.

Hummel’s business is what he calls a chiropractic sports rehab facility. He mainly treats sports injuries but will work on any patient.

Hummel specializes in soft tissue work with something called an active-release technique. He’ll also do traditional chiropractic adjustments as needed.

“Sometimes people don’t even realize I’m a chiropractor.”

He says the technique “really feels more like a stretch, like a fine-tuned stretch.”

“It’s really been effective and really opened a lot of doors for us clinically.”

Hummel is a Wichita-area native but had been working in Dallas when a professional athlete here called him seeking help for his back.

Five years ago, Hummel moved back and opened BlueChip within Pure-Formance Sports & Fitness Training Center in Andover.

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Wheelhouse Sports indoor baseball and softball facility to open in Park City

WICHITA — The Balls-n-Strikes franchise opening in Derby isn’t going to be the only new indoor baseball and softball practice facility in the area.

Jon and Dawn Stiglitz are opening Wheelhouse Sports in 10,000 square feet at 6650 N. Broadway in Park City.

The two have a trophy and award engraving business, Innovative Laser Imaging, that they’ve been running out of their basement. They decided a home-based business wasn’t working as well as they wanted, so they’re going to incorporate that into Wheelhouse as well.

Jon Stiglitz says they got the Wheelhouse name from a baseball term for when a pitcher throws a ball into a hitter’s power zone “and he basically cranks it out.”

Wheelhouse will have six batting cages that feature video simulation of a pitcher winding up and throwing a ball.

“When you’re standing there hitting, it looks like there’s somebody up there throwing the ball to you,” Stiglitz says.

The pitches could be curveballs, fastballs or “anything – you name it,” he says.

There also will be a couple of pitching tunnels.

Stiglitz says he and his wife purchased 14 acres in part so they could also have a golf driving range behind Wheelhouse.

“Well, that, and we got a screamin’ deal on the land,” he says.

S&J Construction is the contractor.

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Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference office moves to Market Centre downtown

WICHITA — The Kansas Collegiate Athletic Conference has a new home of its own instead of using a small space at the Southwestern College Adult Learning Center on North Ridge Road.

“We were tenant farmers in the back of their pasture,” says commissioner Scott Crawford.

The Conference, which represents 10 Kansas schools, now has 600 square feet at the Market Centre at 155 N. Market. It also has shared conference room space.

“It’s going to be exciting to bring the schools to my office for the first time,” Crawford says. “That’s a big deal to me.”

He needed the extra space in part to accommodate a new employee, Robert Brennecke, who is assistant commissioner for operations and sport communications.

“It was a one-man show, and now it’s a two-man show,” Crawford says. “We are working to . . . put a lot more visibility for the conference, for the 10 member schools.”

Patrick Ahern of Grubb & Ellis/Martens Commercial Group handled the deal for the new space.

“I actually have some elbow room,” Crawford says.

It’s not big enough to, say, throw a football or play basketball, but it’s not bad.

“We can play office basketball, but that’s not a varsity sport yet.”

Rangers Baseball Academy to open next week

WICHITA — Barry Newell plans to keep his day job as an assistant principal at Bishop Carroll, but he’s starting a new business, too.

Rangers Baseball Academy opens Monday at 3732 N. Ohio, which is between Hydraulic and Broadway, just south of I-235.

The 10,000-square-foot indoor facility will help kids ages 8 to 18 improve their games.

“I’ve been in baseball for a long time,” Newell says.

Shocker Hall of Famer Jason Adams, who used to play in the Houston Astros organization, is Newell’s partner in the venture.

Adams is a postal worker, but Newell says the plan is for him to eventually work at the academy full time.

Newell has been a guest instructor for the Kansas City Royals and the Toronto Blue Jays, he’s a scout for the Texas Rangers, he’s coached college baseball and is involved with Walter Johnson League Baseball.

“I was wanting to expand on that,” Newell says.

The academy will videotape players and then show them how they can improve their hitting or pitching or any other aspect of their game.

Newell named the academy partly for the Texas Rangers and partly for the Park City Rangers, his Walter Johnson League team.

“It just all kind of fit together.”

Warren Theatres won’t show NCAA Tournament in 3-D — at least not this year

WICHITA — CBS announced this week that about 100 theaters nationally will broadcast the Final Four of the NCAA Tournament in 3-D.

Wichita’s Warren Theatres won’t be one of them — at least not this time around.

“It’s distributed by a company that we don’t do business with,” Bill Warren says.

He says this year’s 3-D broadcasts are on something of a trial basis.

“If it becomes popular, it’s real simple. We’ll do it.”

He’s already ready for it.

“We’ve got the Dolby 3-D process, which I think is the best in the world.”

PGA golfer Woody Austin is a new partner at Willowbend Golf Club

WICHITA — Willowbend Golf Club owners Rod and Rick Nuckolls have a new partner: PGA Tour golfer Woody Austin.

“I will not be a silent investor who will not show up,” Austin says. “Part of the allure for me is I love to tinker. . . . I will be out on the golf course trying to fix a bunker or fix a green.

“It’s a big, long-term deal for me. It’s nothing on a short-term basis.”

The Nuckolls brothers say they couldn’t have a better partner than Austin.

“Everyone knows that Woody Austin is truly one of the best players in the world,” Rick Nuckolls says.

He says Austin’s presence will have an impact with members and the club.

“The capital influx will definitely help us run the operation,” Rod Nuckolls says. “There’s been a lot of things we wanted to do.”

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You don’t say

tiger“Every time I drive by this place I think it is a funeral home owned by the greatest golfer of all time. . . . So I’m all for an end to the confusion.”

— Businessman Sean Thompson’s comment after reading the item about Eldridge Woods Funeral Service, which reminds him of Eldrick “Tiger” Woods, changing names to Central Avenue Funeral Services

All Sports and Jocks and Jills to open east-side store together

wujockWICHITA — Sports memorabilia and apparel stores All Sports and Jocks and Jills are going to open an east-side store together by August.

“It didn’t make sense for both of us to be out here, so let’s merge and make one big sports store,” says Jocks and Jills owner Steve Drennan.

In anticipation of the merger, Drennan closed his Jocks and Jills at 3236 N. Rock near Buffalo Wild Wings about two weeks ago.

kujockDrennan and All Sports owner Randy Staub are considering three potential east-side sites and expect to make a decision soon. The new store likely will contain both store names “to make sure everybody knows,” Staub says.

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