Indianapolis, IN
Supercross 2025 results: 250 highlights, finishing order, reaction at Indianapolis, East's Seth Hammaker wins
Seth Hammaker carried the banner for the Monster Energy Supercross 250 East division riders Saturday night at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana, to give right coast its 28th win in 62 East / West Showdowns. He did so by earning the holeshot and leading all 19 laps of the Main.
This was Hammaker’s second Supercross win. His first came in 2021 in the first race of the three-round residency occasioned by the COVID-19 pandemic. Hammaker began the 2025 season with a fourth-place finish in Tampa, Florida, struggled in Detroit, Michigan, to finish 17th, and was third last week in Daytona Beach, Florida. Hammaker is the eighth winner in nine rounds of Supercross competition.
Tom Vialle applied some pressure in the middle stage of the race but finished second for the second consecutive week. Winless on the season, these back-to-back runner-up finishes have given him the championship lead by a single point over Max Anstie, who was seventh in the Indianapolis race. Three of the five riders who finished between Vialle and Anstie were from the West division, proving how costly Showdowns are.
Click here for a full recap of Indianapolis
Haiden Deegan got off to a slow start and had to come through the field. While this is a move he’s perfected in his brief career, he had to contend with a dramatic off-track excursion late in the event when he jumped too far in a quad and left the track. Deegan went through one of the nets designed to keep riders on course but had a big enough lead over fourth to keep from losing his position during the incident. He finished five positions ahead of his principal rival, Julien Beaumer, and padded his points advantage as well.
RJ Hampshire completed Lap 1 with a massive deficit. He was 14th at the end of Lap 1 and did not crack the top five until Lap 10. He salvaged points by moving up to fourth and kept his championship hopes alive.
Cole Davies was another rider forced to overcome adversity. He got a strong start and was contending for a podium position at the end of Lap 1 but tipped over in the tricky sand section. That accident dropped him to 16th before he made his way back to fifth on Lap 12. He remained there until the checkers waved.
The rider who entered the race with the 250 East red plate, Anstie, was never a factor in the race. He vacillated in the high single digits all night and wound up seventh overall.
Here are the 250 Supercross results, lap times, and points standings after Round 9 at Lucas Oil Stadium in Indianapolis, Indiana:
Results
Feature Results
Fastest Sector Times
Individual Lap Times
Detailed Lap Times
East Heat
West Heat
250 East Rider Points
250 West Rider Points
250 Combined Rider Points
Manufacturer Points
Here is the finishing order of Round 9 in Indianapolis:
1. Seth Hammaker, Kawasaki *
2. Tom Vialle, KTM
3. Haiden Deegan, Yamaha
4. RJ Hampshire, Husqvarna
5. Cole Davies, Yamaha
6. Jo Shimoda, Honda
7. Max Anstie, Yamaha
8. Julien Beaumer, KTM
9. Garrett Marchbanks, Kawasaki
10. Maximus Vohland, Yamaha
11. Daxton Bennick, Yamaha
12. Austin Forkner, Triumph
13. Cullin Park, Honda
14. Nate Thrasher, Yamaha
15. Michael Mosiman, Yamaha
16. Lux Turner, KTM
17. Coty Schock, Yamaha
18. Hunter Yoder, Kawasaki
19. Carson Mumford, Honda
20. Gavin Towers, Honda
21. Chance Hymas, Honda
22. Jett Reynolds, Yamaha
* Holeshot
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Indianapolis, IN
Residents demand alternatives to 2-year closure of critical Indianapolis bridge
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — A community meeting took place on Indy’s westside over what’s threatening to be more than a traffic nightmare.
The planned full closure of the 16th Street bridge could put livelihoods and lives at risk, community advocate Aaron Williams with the Keep the Bridge Open Coalition said.
“And not to mention the countless number of businesses, we’ve calculated over 125 million dollars within a quarter mile of this bridge that generate revenue that are going to be directly impacted,” Williams said.
The aging bridge is scheduled for a full replacement this summer. But in order to do it, the city’s department of public works says it will have to be fully closed to traffic in both directions, for two years. The closure recommendation was first mentioned in a scoping report dating back to 2016.
“It’s been pretty consistent that the recommendation has been a full closure based off of what that first scoping report said,” Kyle Bloyd with the Indianapolis Department of Public Works told News 8.
But residents want to know why the critical span that connects downtown to the city’s Haughville neighborhood can’t be reduced to one lane while the reconstruction takes place, allowing some traffic to get through, instead of none at all.
“We’ve seen time and time again, Lafayette Road, West Kessler Boulecard. We’ve seen where a bridge has been open with one lane in each direction,” Williams said.
It’s a question the owner of Longs Bakery, a longtime Indianapolis favorite, has.
The bakery is walking distance to the bridge, and could see a staggering revenue loss tied to even one day of the bridge being closed, let alone two years.
“We really rely on foot traffic and 500 to 1000 customers a day that are impacted by a bridge they can’t get around or a 10th street bottleneck, that’s our biggest concern,” Carl Long, owner of Longs Bakery said.
The bridge opened in the late 1940s. The Indiana Department of Public Works says there’s no record of any significant rehab effort on the bridge since that time.
Indianapolis, IN
IMPD asks for help to find missing 26-year-old man
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — Indianapolis police on Tuesday asked for the public’s help to find a missing 26-year-old man with autism.
Tyrese Pepper was described as being 5 feet, 8 inches tall and weighing 150 pounds. He was wearing a dark-colored jacket with a Colts logo and navy jogger pants.
He was last seen riding a navy-and-white bicycle eastbound on East 21st Street, according to the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department.
IMPD says Pepper is nonverbal and autistic.
If located, please call 911 immediately.
Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis councilman says ‘No Data Centers’ note was left at his home after someone opened fire
The home of a councilman in Indianapolis was shot at early Monday in what local police said was an “isolated, targeted incident.”
The incident came less than a week after the Indianapolis Metropolitan Development Commission voted 6 to 2 on April 1 to approve rezoning to allow the construction of a data center.
Ron Gibson, a Democrat who represents District 8 on the council, spoke out in support of the rezoning and the efforts to build the data center in his district.
“Earlier this morning, between approximately 12:45 a.m. and 12:50 a.m., just a few hours after Easter Sunday, an individual fired 13 rounds at the front door of my home and left a note on my doorstep that read, ‘No Data Centers,’” Gibson said in a Monday statement.
Councilman Ron Gibson
The Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department said it was called to the home on Monday morning, and officers found evidence that gunshots had been fired at the house. Police said no injuries were reported.
“I understand that public service can bring strong opinions and disagreement, but violence is never the answer, especially when it puts families at risk,” Gibson said in his statement.
The Indianapolis-Marion County City-County Council did not respond to requests for comment from Business Insider.
The data center is set to be built by Metrobloks, a data center developer based in Los Angeles. Following the vote last week, Gibson shared a statement on social media promoting the project.
“Metrobloks has the potential to bring significant investment, create jobs, and generate long-term tax revenue that supports infrastructure, housing, and essential services,” the statement said.
A data center boom is happening across the US, with companies pouring billions into building the infrastructure to keep up with demand in the era of AI. The data centers have faced increased opposition, with critics pointing to the high resource costs, from water to energy, and other issues like noise pollution, as detailed in a Business Insider investigation.
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