ΊμΑμ½νΉΟ±¨ alum blends his love for sports and history into a podcast

  • ΊμΑμ½νΉΟ±¨ alum Andrew Stockmann started his podcast in early 2021 as a way to enrich his life while working from home.
  • His experiences in WSU's sport management program helped with ideas and connections in the world of sports museums.
  • Baseball played a big role in his childhood, and many of his podcasts focus on that sport.

Andrew Stockmann grew up with parents who loved sports and history. They created the environment for him to combine those influences into a podcast that focuses on athletic halls of fame and museums.

β€œA lot of our vacations growing up were around baseball,” he said. β€œI get a lot of my fandom from my dad (Joe). My mom (Julie) studied history in school. I want to say both of them are a little jealous of some of the stuff I’m doing, because we all have the same interests.”

Stockmann, a 2020 ΊμΑμ½νΉΟ±¨ graduate and sport management major, is in his second year hosting

In late September, Stockmann spoke at the International Sports Heritage Association’s conference in Wisconsin at Lambeau Field, home of the NFL’s Green Bay Packers. He presented his experiences with his podcast and explained how museums can benefit from the platform.

β€œI walked through the process of doing an episode, what that entails from the brain-storming process to the final product,” he said.

Stockmann, from Liberty, Missouri, has interviewed directors and curators from places such as the Kansas City Royals Hall of Fame, College Football Hall of Fame in Atlanta, Negro Leagues Baseball Museum in Kansas City, and Pro Rodeo Hall of Fame in Colorado Springs.

β€œThe inspiration was wanting to fill my time in a more meaningful way,” he said. β€œIn January of 2021, I was working remotely. I was really just working 9 to 5 from my apartment. I was watching ’Everybody Loves Raymondβ€˜ reruns in the evenings, and I was like β€˜That’s not a bad way to live, but it’s not the best, most fulfilling way.’”

As a WSU student, he attended the International Sports Heritage Association’s conference in 2019 at the Kansas Sports Hall of Fame in Wichita. Drawing on that experience and people he met at the conference, he typed out podcast plans on a Word document in his computer.

β€œGoing to that was pretty eye-opening,” he said. β€œI saw that I can work in a sports museum for my career.”

Stockmann grew up cheering for the Kansas City Royals and Chiefs and playing baseball. ΊμΑμ½νΉΟ±¨β€™s sport management program and the tuition discount offered through the Shocker City Partnership attracted him to the university.

While at ΊμΑμ½νΉΟ±¨, he worked for a baseball scouting service and in the ticket office for the Omaha Storm Chasers, the Triple-A farm team for the Royals.

β€œI liked the focus on applied learning,” he said. β€œAnother factor was the faculty. I really enjoy, and still keep up with, Dr. (Mark) Vermillion and (assistant professor) Mike Ross.”

Stockmann is pursuing his master’s degree in museum studies at the University of Kansas. While sports are his love, he is open to working in museum education and curation in other area.

β€œI don’t want to limit myself to just sports, because I’m also interested in American history or presidential libraries,” he said.

Stockmann has 26 episodes available, ranging from a small baseball museum in Illinois to one devoted to bobblehead dolls. As a lifelong Royals fan, interviewing Curt Nelson, director of the Royals Hall of Fame, is a highlight.

He recommends the short trip to the

β€œIt’s a really cool space to honor the Negro Leaguers,” he said. β€œIt walks through Black baseball in its entirety, really."

His dream interview is landing time with someone from one of the four most prominent halls – Pro Football in Canton, Ohio, National Baseball in Cooperstown, N.Y., Naismith Memorial Basketball in Springfield, Mass., and Hockey in Toronto.

For an idea born from his recliner during a pandemic, Stockmann’s podcast is well on its way to fulfilling his ambition to combine sports and history into a worthwhile project.

Read about Stockmann's 2020 internship and how he adjusted to pandemic obstacles


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