Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis March Madness tickets: How to see Purdue, Marquette, Florida, more in NCAA Tournament 2024
The No. 1 seed Purdue Boilermakers will play the No. 16 Montana State/Grambling State winner on Friday, March 22 in the Midwest Region of the NCAA men’s basketball tournament.
Popular third-party ticket websites have tickets for all the March Madness 2024 games being played in Indianapolis on March 22 and March 24, including games featuring Florida and Marquette. Or you can buy session 1 and session 2 tickets for the first round on Friday.
Purdue and Montana State/Grambling State will play March 22 at 7:25 p.m. Eastern at Gainbridge Fieldhouse in Indianapolis. The winner advances to play Sunday, March 24. Montana State and Grambling State play in the First Four to determine who will face Purdue.
Here’s ticket info for every game in Indianapolis on March 22:
No. 2 Marquette vs. No. 15 Western Kentucky in South Region at 2 p.m. Session 1 tickets: Vivid Seats | StubHub
No. 7 Florida vs. No. 10 Boise State/Colorado in South Region at 4:30 p.m. Session 1 tickets: Vivid Seats | StubHub
No. 1 Purdue vs. Montana State/Grambling State winner in South Region at 7:25 p.m. Session 2 tickets: Vivid Seats | StubHub
No. 8 Utah State vs. No. 9 TCU in Midwest Region at 9:55 p.m. Session 2 tickets: Vivid Seats | StubHub
Here are the cheapest all-session tickets I could find as of the evening of Sunday, March 17 (this gets you into all games on March 22 and March 24):
Vivid Seats: $452
StubHub: $454
SeatGeek: $540
TicketCity: $477
Ticketmaster: $521
There are plenty of ways to watch the Indianapolis games in the NCAA tournament live and for free. Print a March Madness bracket for the men’s NCAA Tournament so you can stay up-to-date on your favorite teams.
Kaylee Remington is the commerce reporter for cleveland.com and The Plain Dealer. Follow her for the best deals and breaking news in the shopping, entertainment and sports industries. Read her work online.
Indianapolis, IN
Indiana Silver Alert issued for 14-year-old girl in Indianapolis
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — The Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department detectives on Friday afternoon asked for help in locating 14-year-old Kathya Rodriguez, last seen on Monday afternoon.
On Friday night, an Indiana Silver Alert was issued for the girl.
Described as 4 feet, 9 inches, and 99 pounds with brown hair and brown eyes, Kathya was last seen on Monday in the area of 2100 Waterford Place. That’s at The Meridian apartments off Westlane Road/West 71st Street on the city’s northwest side.
She was last seen about 12:45 p.m. Monday. She was wearing a gray hoodie with white writing, blue jeans, and sandals with socks.
In a statement Friday, IMPD said early in the investigation, detectives had no information indicating she was in danger, but as the investigation continued, detectives found details that led them to believe Kathya might be at risk.
Detectives believe she may be with Victor Martinez, 15. IMPD described him as 5 feet, 5 inches, and 165 pounds, with brown hair and brown eyes. He was last seen Monday near 7200 Knobwood Drive. That’s also at The Meridian apartments.
Anyone with information on her whereabouts was asked to call 911, contact the IMPD missing persons unit at 317-327-6160, or call Crimestoppers of Central Indiana at 317-262-8477.
This story was updated from its initial post after IMPD corrected the last name of Kathya.
Indianapolis, IN
Data center moratorium proposed by Indianapolis City-County Council president
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) – The Indianapolis City-County Council President plans to propose a data center moratorium on Monday.
President Maggie Lewis, a Democrat, said she plans to introduce an amendment to proposed data center zoning regulations during the Metropolitan and Economic Development Committee meeting on July 13, enacting a moratorium.
“This pause will provide the City-County Council, the administration, industry experts, and community stakeholders the opportunity to fully evaluate the long-term impacts of these developments, including infrastructure demands, utility capacity, environmental considerations, economic outcomes, and neighborhood quality of life,” Lewis said in a statement. “This is not about slowing progress. It is about exercising responsible leadership and ensuring that decisions of this magnitude are made through a thoughtful, transparent, and data-driven process.”
Metropolitan Development Commission (MDC) President John Dillon dismissed the idea of a moratorium when the MDC advanced the data center zoning ordinance, even in the face of dozens of protesters.
The zoning regulations, if approved, would set minimum standards for data center developments in Indianapolis. Critics have said the regulations, as written, are too broad and will only streamline development.
Groups like Citizens Action Coalition have called for a moratorium to allow time to draft more robust restrictions. Lewis echoed similar motivations when announcing her intent to propose the pause on developments.
“Our responsibility is to make informed decisions that serve the best interests of Indianapolis residents,” Lewis said. “Given the significant questions that remain, a deliberate review is both prudent and necessary before moving forward.”
The City-County Council unanimously approved a special resolution on May 4, requesting the MDC temporarily stop approving new data centers. But the resolution isn’t enforceable. Councilman Michael-Paul Hart, a Republican, previously told News 8 the vote was more symbolic to him rather than a real measure to slow development.
A public hearing on the data center zoning regulations is planned at 5:30pm on Monday, July 13, inside the City-County Building at 200 E Washington St in Indianapolis.
Indianapolis, IN
Unsettled Friday and Saturday, then summer heat returns early next week | July 10, 2026
TODAY
Partly sunny and warm with scattered showers and thunderstorms likely through much of the bookends of the day. Highs reach the mid 80s, with a west southwest breeze around 5 mph. It does not look like nonstop rain from start to finish, but this is the least reliable daytime period in the forecast, and any stronger storm could drop a quick heavy downpour with a gusty burst of wind.
TONIGHT
Scattered showers and thunderstorms remain possible through the evening, then another lower-end storm chance lingers late overnight. Lows settle near the upper 60s, with light wind. The severe risk looks lower than it is Thursday night, but a few pockets of heavier rain are still possible if a boundary stalls close enough to central Indiana.
TOMORROW
Mostly cloudy and not quite as hot, with another chance for showers and thunderstorms developing mainly after mid afternoon. Highs reach the low to mid 80s, with a light northeast breeze around 5 mph. Much of the first half of the day should be usable, but later afternoon and evening plans will still need a weather eye.
TOMORROW NIGHT
A few showers and thunderstorms may linger early, then the trend turns quieter with mostly cloudy skies overnight. Lows fall to the upper 60s, with an east northeast breeze around 5 mph. It is a calmer setup than Friday night overall, even if an early interruption is still possible.
SUNDAY
Mostly sunny and warmer with highs in the mid 80s. An east breeze around 5 to 10 mph keeps the day from feeling too stagnant, and this looks like one of the cleaner forecast days of the stretch. Most of central Indiana should stay dry from start to finish.
SUNDAY NIGHT
Mostly clear and seasonably mild, with lows around the mid 60s and a light east northeast breeze. Quiet weather continues overnight with no meaningful travel concerns.
MONDAY
Sunny and hotter, with highs climbing into the upper 80s. A light east wind around 5 mph holds through the day. After the unsettled end of the workweek, this looks like a very usable summer day with heat becoming the main story instead of storms.
MONDAY NIGHT
Mostly clear and warm, with lows near 70 and only a light breeze. There will be little trouble overnight, and the warmer pattern settles in more firmly.
TUESDAY
Sunny and hot again, with highs near 90. Wind stays light, becoming east southeast around 5 mph in the afternoon. This is another day where the weather looks broadly quiet, with heat the main thing to plan around.
7 DAY FORECAST
The main concern in the near term is the unsettled Friday into Saturday period, when repeated rounds of showers and thunderstorms could bring quick heavy rain, especially Friday afternoon and evening. After that, the pattern trends warmer and drier from Sunday into at least Tuesday, with highs returning to the upper 80s and lower 90s while heat index values stay more manageable than the late-June heat. By Wednesday and Thursday, isolated afternoon and evening storms begin to creep back into the forecast, with a more noticeable thunderstorm threat showing up later next week into next weekend.
-
Mississippi17 seconds ago
Tracking Mississippi State baseball players, signees picked in 2026 MLB Draft
-
Missouri7 minutes agoMissouri pushes for more nuclear energy to power the future
-
Montana10 minutes ago
Montana Lottery Mega Millions, Big Sky Bonus results for July 10, 2026
-
Nebraska15 minutes agoNebraska has two players honored by the Big Ten Conference on Thursday
-
Nevada22 minutes agoPlanetary parade this weekend — when to see it in Northern Nevada
-
New Hampshire25 minutes ago9 Most Hospitable Towns In New Hampshire
-
New Jersey30 minutes agoHusband of slain New Jersey mom begs for help in newly released 911 call | Fox News Video
-
New Mexico37 minutes agoNM Delegation Demands Answers On Reports Of DEA Declining To Seize Massive Fentanyl Shipments, Calls For Immediate Reforms