One of the world’s longest-tenured managers has been let go. On Monday morning, MLS side Sporting Kansas City mutually agreed to part ways with longtime head coach Peter Vermes.
Vermes, 58, had been head coach with SKC since 2009, when the club rebranded to Sporting Kansas City from its previous monikers, the Kansas City Wizards and Kansas City Wiz.
However, he had been involved with the club since 2006, when he came on as the Sporting technical director. Through his tenure in the front office and on the touchline, he helped lead the team to the 2013 MLS Cup title, three U.S. Open Cup titles, and 11 MLS Cup Playoff appearances.
His final game in charge came on Saturday, as SKC fell 2–1 to FC Dallas, bringing them a fifth loss in their first six games of the 2025 MLS season.
As a head coach, he led SKC for 609 games in all competitions, over half the games in the club’s 30-year history, and the most for a manager at a single MLS cup. Through those, he coached 511 regular season games, with his tenure lasting seven seasons longer than any other active MLS manager.
Subscribe here to MLS Season Pass
He also became the first and only person to win MLS Cup as a coach and player with the same team, having won the league’s championship in 2000 as a standout center back.
While there were many successful moments throughout his coaching tenure in SKC, his side had gotten off to an exceptionally poor start in 2025, claiming one point through their first six games, leading fans to call for him to leave the club.
Former U.S. international Kerry Zavagnin, an assistant coach on Vermes’ staff, has been named the club’s interim head coach.






