Kansas City Attack

{{Infobox football club

| clubname = Kansas City Attack

| image = CometsLogoLast.jpg

| upright =

| fullname = Kansas City Attack

| nickname = Attack

| shortname =

| founded = {{start date and years ago|1989|}}

| dissolved = {{start date and years ago|2005|}}

| ground = Kemper Arena; Municipal Auditorium

| capacity =

| chairman =

| ceo =

| mgrtitle =

| manager =

| league = MISL; NPSL

| season =

| position =

}}

The Kansas City Attack, previously the Atlanta Attack and later known as the Kansas City Comets, were an indoor soccer team based for most of its existence in Kansas City, Missouri. In its various incarnations the franchise played in the National Professional Soccer League from 1989–2001 and the second Major Indoor Soccer League from 2001–2005. They played their home games at the Municipal Auditorium and later Kemper Arena.

History

The franchise originated as the Atlanta Attack, which joined the American Indoor Soccer Association as an expansion team based in Atlanta, Georgia in 1989. In 1990 the league changed its name to the National Professional Soccer League. In 1991 the team relocated to Kansas City, Missouri, which had just lost its prolific Major Indoor Soccer League team, becoming the Kansas City Attack. The Attack played their first season at the Municipal Auditorium and moved into Kemper Arena in 1992.

The 1992–93 season was also the first of two national NPSL championship years for the Attack with Rookie Eddie Carmean scoring the game winning goal in the semi-final overtime to send the Attack to finals for the first time.

Kansas City was one of the more successful of the NPSL's teams, though the league itself declined in the late 1990s. In 2001 the league disbanded, and Kansas City and the NPSL's five other remaining teams formed a new league, the second Major Indoor Soccer League. At this time the team renamed itself the Kansas City Comets, after the city's original indoor soccer team. In 2005 the franchise announced that it would not play in the 2005–2006 and 2006–2007 seasons, but hoped to reform thereafter. However, the team did not reorganize by the time the second MISL folded in 2008.

In 2010, the Missouri Comets, based in nearby Independence, joined the third Major Indoor Soccer League as an expansion team, carrying on the Comets name.

Year-by-year

class="wikitable"

!Year

!Division

!League

!Reg. season

!Playoffs

!Avg. attendance

1989–90

|2

|AISA

|2nd, American (23–17)

|Lost Semifinals

|

1990–91

|2

|NPSL

|2nd, American (25–15)

|Lost in the 1st round

|3,715

1991–92

|2

|NPSL

|2nd, National (26–14)

|Lost Semifinals

|3,009

1992–93

|1

|NPSL

|2nd, National (26–14)

|bgcolor="FFEBAD"|Champions

|4,644

1993–94

|1

|NPSL

|6th, National (14–26)

|Did not qualify

|4,240

1994–95

|1

|NPSL

|2nd, National (29–11)

|Lost 2nd Round

|3,870

1995–96

|1

|NPSL

|bgcolor="B3B7FF"|1st, National (32–8)

| style="background:#ffcbcb;"|Lost Finals

|4,865

1996–97

|1

|NPSL

|2nd(t), National Midwest (26–14)

|bgcolor="FFEBAD"|Champions

|5,619

1997–98

|1

|NPSL

|3rd, National Midwest (20–20)

|Lost Conference Semifinals

|5,214

1998–99

|1

|NPSL

|2nd, National Midwest (19–21)

|Lost Conference Semifinals

|5,990

1999–00

|1

|NPSL

|bgcolor="B3B7FF"|1st, National Midwest (24–20)

|Lost Conference Semifinals

|5,127

2000–01

|1

|NPSL

|4th, National (14–26)

|Lost Conference Semifinals

|5,324

2001–02

|1

|MISL

|3rd, MISL (24–20)

|Lost Semifinals

|4,661

2002–03

|1

|MISL

|2nd, Western (17–19)

|Lost Conference Finals

|5,414

2003–04

|1

|MISL

|2nd, Central (17–19)

|Lost Semifinals

|5,374

2004–05

|1

|MISL

|5th, MISL (18–21)

|Did not qualify

|4,789

Honors

Championships

  • 1992–1993 NPSL Champions
  • 1996–1997 NPSL Champions

Division titles

  • 1995–1996 National Division
  • 1999–2000 Midwest Division

Head coaches

Arenas