Kansas City’s Redline Glow Tour brought a full weekend of cheer and dance competition to Hy-Vee Arena on March 28 and 29, 2026, turning the venue into a busy hub for athletes, coaches, families, and fans.
The Kansas City stop was part of Redline’s Glow Tour series and came with a full event setup that included a free live broadcast, action photography, championship bids, and the kind of polished production the company says it is known for.
Doors opened at 7:00 a.m., with the first performances starting at 8:00 a.m. both days.
The weekend also carried more than just competition. Redline’s event materials showed that the Kansas City Glow Tour included an athlete party on Friday night at The College Basketball Experience downtown, giving teams a chance to gather before stepping onto the mat.
Redline’s setup for Kansas City was designed to run like a complete championship experience, not just a one-day meet.
For Mega All Stars, the Kansas City stop turned into a weekend worth celebrating. The program posted a recap after the event saying its athletes “lit up the mat” and that the teams “showed OUT,” with the message clearly reflecting a strong sense of pride in how the weekend played out.
The recap also celebrated every team that took part, suggesting that the success was spread across the program rather than limited to one standout group. That kind of post-event energy is part of what makes local competition weekends feel bigger than the scores alone.
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The results backed up the excitement. Incinerate finished with 1st Place, Level Champs, and Grand Champs, giving the team one of the biggest possible weekends. Dynamite, Intensity, and Ignite each earned 1st Place, Level Champs, while Sizzle brought home 1st Place. Baby Blaze received an Outstanding Performance recognition, and Fire was praised for an Amazing Performance.
For a program posting across multiple divisions, that is the kind of overall showing that makes a competition weekend feel especially successful.
Redline’s Kansas City event page shows that the Glow Tour was more than just a local stop. The competition offered credits and rankings in The Open Championships Series and also included bids to the Allstar World Championships and the Redline Kalahari Super Nationals, which gave teams added incentive to perform well.
The event page also noted that prep teams compete both days and that they receive the same prizes as elite teams, including the event’s signature awards and recognition.
That larger championship structure helps explain why weekends like this matter so much to teams. A strong Kansas City showing can boost momentum, build confidence, and improve a program’s standing for the rest of the season. For athletes, that means every routine carries extra weight.
For coaches, it means the event is not just about one performance, but about season-long progress and what comes next.
Redline’s event materials make clear that Kansas City was set up to support that kind of competitive environment, with scheduled sessions, awards across divisions, and a production style built around consistency.
By the end of the weekend, the picture was pretty clear. The Redline Glow Tour Kansas City stop delivered a packed, high-energy competition experience, and Mega All Stars came away with a strong set of results to match.
Between the athlete party, the early-morning starts, the championship stakes, and the big finishes across several teams, Kansas City got a full weekend of cheer action that ended on a high note.
For Mega All Stars, it was the kind of event recap that writes itself: good performances, strong results, and plenty to be proud of.
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