The Santa Fe Wanderers soccer club pose with a trophy
The Santa Fe Wanderers have played in the Kansas City, Kansas Soccer League since 1998. (Contributed | Santa Fe Wanderers)

The Story of the Santa Fe Wanderers

March 6, 2020  |    |  4 min read

 

To say Luis Cadena plays for the name on the front of his jersey would be an understatement.

Cadena’s a Wanderer by blood.

“He struggled quite a bit in the beginning,” the 26-year-old said, quietly recounting a few details of his father Lorenzo Cadena’s search for a better life in the United States.

That journey began in 1986, when the senior Cadena left his home and college enrollment in Chihuahua, Mexico, behind. The first stop out of Mexico was El Paso, Texas. He eventually made his way to Kansas City.

“He got here, he didn’t know anybody, he didn’t speak the language. He was living under the bridges in downtown Kansas City,” Cadena said. 

Months roughing it along Southwest Boulevard and in Argentine food kitchens went by in the unfamiliar heart of his brand-new country, until, thanks to a friend of a friend of a friend, work came with a residential painting company.

Cue the proverbial “American Dream.” 

The Santa Fe Wanderers pose for a photo after winning a league championship.
The team poses for a photo after the 2010 league title game. (Courtesy | Santa Fe Wanderers)

“Over time he eventually started up his own business and his brothers were now in Kansas City as well — brothers in law and other family members. The community started to grow,” Luis Cardena said.

And where the Cadenas are from, where there’s community, there’s soccer. Afterall, what’s a better life without the beautiful game?

In 1998, Cadena, along with his brother Alonzo and a few friends, founded “Club de Futbol Chihuahua” — the team of most humble beginnings in the top tier of the Kansas City, Kansas Soccer League, the most competitive adult league in the state.

Sundays during soccer seasons start in the church and finish on the pitch. And while the two-part tradition spent with friends and family stuck, the club’s original name did not. 

Just before the turn of the millenium, “Club de Futbol Chihuahua” became the “Santa Fe Wanderers” — a nod to Lorenzo Cadena’s odyssey into the unknown more than 10 years before. 

Santa Fe Wanderer crests through the years.
Former Santa Fe Wanderer crests (Santa Fe Wanderers website)

“It was a team truly founded by immigrants,” said Luis Cadena, who took over his family club as the Wanderer’s player/owner in 2016. It was the logical next step for the then-college student, who spent a handful of seasons as a Wanderer, dating back to when the adults decided he was talented enough to be rostered.

Cadena played two years of college soccer at Johnson County Community College, then two more at MidAmerica Nazarene University. When it comes to his lifelong bond with soccer, along with his education, all of the credit goes to his father and the bold decision he made so many years ago. 

Soccer players, including Luis Cadena pose for a photo pre-match with referees.
Luis Cadena (second from left) poses for a pre-match photo. (Contributed | Santa Fe Wanderers)

In more than 20 years since its creation, the Wanderers have been a regular in the KCKASL, which fields a handful of other immigrant-centered teams from all over the world. Under Cadena’s leadership, the club has expanded to compete in other semi-pro or regional leagues across the Midwest, like the new Great Plains Premier League and fields a roster that’s competitive as ever. 

Additionally, the club recently launched its youth program and has plans to support the next generation of players to come out of their community.

“We made it a tradition way back when the team was founded and just kind of found it as a gathering place for the family to reunite. Soccer kept the family tied together no matter which directions we were heading in life. It was just the meeting place for us,” the second-generation Wanderer said.

“It touches back to the origins and the roots of where we came from.”

Reading these stories is free, but telling them is not. Start your monthly gift now to support Flatland’s community-focused reporting.

Nick’s Picks | Roads, Bathrooms, Costco and More …

By | February 16, 2026

New Toll Road Opens Kansas City’s first toll road opens this week. Starting Saturday, you’ll pay up to $3.50 to travel the new express lanes on U.S. Highway 69 from 103rd to 151st streets in Overland Park. There are no toll booths — cameras scan your license plate, and a bill arrives by mail. KTAG…

Related Stories

Nick’s Picks | Roads, Bathrooms, Costco and More …

By | February 16, 2026

New Toll Road Opens Kansas City’s first toll road opens this week. Starting Saturday, you’ll pay up to $3.50 to travel the new express lanes on U.S. Highway 69 from 103rd to 151st streets in Overland Park. There are no toll booths — cameras scan your license plate, and a bill arrives by mail. KTAG…

Up From the Ashes: Warwick Theatre Revival Draws Applause

By | February 11, 2026

Two years ago, John Cleary met a fellow Kansas City actor for drinks. Their conversation centered on the fate of the Metropolitan Ensemble Theatre. A large portion of the ensemble’s home, the Warwick Theatre, was ash, charred timbers and soot-saturated costumes and props — remnants from a recent massive fire. The destruction was so great…

Nick’s Picks | Baseball, Drones, Romance and More …

By | February 9, 2026

Royals Reveal Next week, the Kansas City Royals head to Arizona for Spring Training. And that’s the mayor’s self-imposed deadline to lock in a stadium deal. So, is this finally the week owner John Sherman steps to the plate and unveils where the Royals will build their next home? At last week’s council meeting, Mayor…