Indianapolis, IN
MLS commissioner: Indy doing 'everything right' in bid to join league – Indianapolis Business Journal
COLUMBUS, Ohio—Major League Soccer Commissioner Don Garber said Indianapolis is “following the playbook” in its effort to land an expansion club.
Speaking at a mid-season news conference during MLS All-Star week in Columbus, Garber said that while the addition of San Diego FC in 2025 will “be the end of expansion for a time,” he is paying close attention to the work Indianapolis officials are doing to position the city for a bid to the league and plans to continue engaging with city officials in the coming months.
Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett, who announced his effort to pursue Major League Soccer on April 25, traveled to Columbus to engage with Garber and league and team executives, alongside the the city’s Chief Deputy Mayor Dan Parker on Tuesday and Tom Glick, a longtime soccer executive working with the city to oversee its MLS efforts.
While Hogsett said he hopes to work with a prospective investor group to file a league application from the city by the end of this year, Garber said Wednesday he considers the process to be in its infancy.
“I think they’re doing, so far, everything right,” he said. “They’re following the playbook. Tom’s a very experienced guy … who knows how to build a team and a soccer team. So I think they’re doing everything right. This is a process. It takes time and these are teams that require a whole lot of constituents to come together, from ownership to city leaders to other fans and partners, and we’re very much in the beginning of this process.”
Hogsett and Garber first met April 22, just three days before the mayor publicly announced plans to pursue MLS. The city contingent attended a private reception hosted by Garber on Tuesday night, although Hogsett returned to Indianapolis on Wednesday to greet Vice President Kamala Harris upon her arrival for a sorority convention.
Garber said while Hogsett, local and state leaders “are very bullish” about joining MLS, he expects the league will rely on a tried and true formula, which has evolved over the past 28 years, to decide what organizations will join its ranks.
“We’ve done this a lot. We’ve expanded by over 20 teams … so we understand how to manage this process,” he said. “We love the city. We love the support from the city leaders and from the state. We think there’s interesting ownership dynamics. We like the location that we’re talking about for the stadium, so we’ll continue to work with them.”
The Hogsett administration in the coming weeks is expected to receive a completed feasibility study and fiscal analysis for the proposed soccer stadium site at the Indianapolis Downtown Heliport from Chicago-based Hunden Partners. Those reports will be submitted to the Indiana Finance Authority, State Budget Committee and State Budget Agency for consideration as part of a request to finalize a new professional sports development area, or PSDA, taxing district.
A source familiar with the situation said several team and league executives also met separately on Wednesday with Glick, amid a day of meetings tied to the MLS Board of Governors at the Hilton Columbus downtown hotel.
Glick helped establish Charlotte FC and was a longtime front office executive for New York City FC, in addition to stints with overseas clubs. He now runs Charlotte-based Rockledge Sports Advisory.
He, alongside Hogsett and Parker, also hosted several league executives, attorneys and other power players in a suite at Lower.com Field, during Tuesday’s MLS All-Star Skills Challenge. Indianapolis City-County Council president Vop Osili is attending Wednesday’s all-star game in Hogsett’s place, arriving in Columbus on Wednesday evening.
Glick and Parker also independently met with multiple league and MLS team officials throughout Tuesday and Wednesday, sources told IBJ, speaking on the condition of anonymity given the sensitivity of discussions about Major League Soccer expansion.
Garber said he’s aware of who is involved in a would-be investor group for an Indianapolis club but said he couldn’t provide any details.
Speculation continues to swirl about the involvement of the Herb Simon family, which owns the Indiana Pacers and Fever franchises. However, Danny Lopez, executive vice president of community and external affairs and corporate communications for the Pacers organization, told IBJ the Simons are not in Columbus this week.
Indy Eleven owner Ersal Ozdemir, whose Eleven Park soccer stadium project was torpedoed when the city announced its own MLS efforts also did not attend all-star events. Glick and city officials have unsuccessfully approached Ozdemir at least four times about being part of the ownership group, a source said.
Hogsett has said he expects a local investor group will be revealed “sooner rather than later,” and certainly before the city submits its request to the state government entities for consideration of the PSDA.
Garber noted that despite Indianapolis’ interest, there’s no firm timeline for MLS to expand from its current stable of 30 teams to where many owners have indicated it hopes to be—at 32 overall. But he said if Indianapolis, or any other city, makes a compelling argument to join the league, it would have the ears of league leadership.
“If there’s a good market for us to expand it, if that market makes sense, if we have the right owner, and the right stadium plan, I think, like any league, we would consider strongly expanding beyond 30 teams that we have now,” he said.
League and team sources told IBJ this week it could be a tough path forward for Indianapolis because the league hadn’t planned to consider expansion until after North America hosts the World Cup in 2026, noting that MLS club entry fees could grow anywhere from 25% to 50% higher from their latest price. San Diego paid $500 million for its club, which begins play next year.
Whether or not Indianapolis gets that nod—and regardless of when it comes—it’s clear that the next expansion club will be on the hook an entry fee that’s higher than what San Diego paid just a few years ago.
“It will be more than $500 million” for that fee, Garber said.
Hogsett said this week that while he didn’t expect any formal commitments from MLS during his trip to Columbus, he continues to be interested in an “accelerated” timeline for Indianapolis’ shot at joining the league.
“All we can focus on is making sure that we’re doing what we need to be doing, to put together as competitive a bid for a club as we can, and that’s what we are doing,” he said.
“We would like that process to be as accelerated as we can reasonably make it, while at the same time being responsible. My job as mayor is to present to them the most compelling argument as to why Indianapolis should be included in decisions that they may ultimately make about awarding a club, and we’re doing that. MLS will take care of the rest once we’ve submitted an application.”
Clark Hunt, owner of Dallas FC and the Kansas City Chiefs, was among those who met with Hogsett in the suite. He said they discussed the stadium site and the city’s overall interest in joining the league.
“It’s great to see [Indianapolis] political leaders here,” he said. “They’re obviously very focused on it, and they came to make sure everybody in the league knows that their interest is sincere.”
Hunt, who has been involved with the league since 1996, initially as owner of the Columbus Crew, is considered among the most influential owners in the league when it comes to expansion discussions.
Like Garber, Hunt said the league has “no established timeline right now for future expansion” but added he thinks Indianapolis would be a good fit for MLS when that time comes.
“I think it’s likely down the road that we’ll consider expansion again,” he said. “Clearly a city like Indianapolis, which is a proven sports town, would have to be a great candidate.”
Hunt and other owners told IBJ they believe the league could reasonably expand to 32 teams, matching the number now playing in the National Football League.
Jeff Berding, co-CEO of FC Cincinnati, said he expects the league will eventually pursue that number, but said the World Cup might be an opportune time to do so.
“I’m not going to get out ahead of it,” he said. “Obviously, there’s other leagues in the United States that have more teams than our current 30. So that would say that there’s a model for success.”
Indianapolis, IN
Colts fans react to Chris Ballard, Shane Steichen keeping their jobs: ‘What an embarrassing joke’
The Indianapolis Colts have decided to keep general manager Chris Ballard and coach Shane Steichen, though the Colts lost their last seven games of the 2025 season missed the AFC playoffs for the fifth consecutive year.
The Colts do not hold a first-round pick in the 2026 NFL Draft after sending their next two first-rounders to the New York Jets for cornerback Sauce Gardner, so new leadership would have a limited impact in the short term.
Shane Steichen coaching record
- Shane Steichen: 3 seasons, 25-26 record, 0 playoff appearances. The Colts went 9-8 in 2023 and 8-9 in both ’24 and ’25. He is 2-10 vs. Houston and Jacksonville.
Chris Ballard record as Indianapolis Colts general manager
- Chris Ballard: 9 seasons, 70-78-1 record, 2 playoff appearances. The Colts went 11-5 in 2020 and 10-6 in ’18.
Reaction to Indianapolis Colts keeping general manager Chris Ballard, coach Shane Steichen
Joel A. Erickson and Nathan Brown cover the Colts all season. Get more coverage on IndyStarTV and with the Colts Insider newsletter.
Indianapolis, IN
IMPD: 68-year-old woman missing from Indianapolis
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — UPDATE: IMPD detectives with the Missing Persons Division have safely located Zohott.
Original Story
The Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department is seeking the public’s help in locating 68-year-old Mari Zohott.
Zohott is described as standing five feet five inches tall, weighing 115 pounds, and having brown hair and brown eyes. She was last seen at 1:30 p.m. Jan. 3 on foot in the 9200 block of E. 10th Street. Zohott was last seen wearing hot pink pants and a black hoodie. Detectives are looking into the possibility that Mari got on a bus.
According to her family, Zohott is believed to have symptoms of undiagnosed early onset dementia. She may be in need of medical attention.
Investigators ask that anyone with information on Zohott’s whereabouts call 911, contact the IMPD Missing Persons Unit at 317-327-6160, or call Crime Stoppers of Central Indiana at 317.262.8477 or (TIPS).
Indianapolis, IN
Police recover body of missing teen, RJ Williams, in White River
Robert “RJ” Williams Jr.’s aunt speaks after his body recovered in White River
Patricia Madison, who identified herself as Robert “RJ” Williams’ aunt, speaks to media near where her nephew was recovered from the White River on Saturday, Jan. 3, 2026, in Broad Ripple.
Police recovered the body of a missing 16-year-old with autism Jan. 3 in the White River, a few hundred feet from the Broad Ripple McDonald’s, where he was last seen.
Emergency personnel loaded the body of Robert “RJ” Williams Jr., shielded by baby blue sheets, into the coroner’s van Saturday afternoon. Family members stood nearby, grasping each other in hugs. A ‘missing’ poster for Williams was taped to the wooden steps leading down to the water where his body was found.
“RJ was a good kid. He didn’t bother nobody,” Williams’ aunt Patricia Madison said through tears. “He loved his family, and now he’s gone.”
Police had been searching for Williams after he was last seen between a McDonald’s and a bus stop on Dec. 17 in the 1100 block of Broad Ripple Avenue, according to a missing person’s flyer. It also stated that he suffered from mood disorders and had a history of psychosis. The flier also said he had the “mentality of a 10 or 11-year-old.”
Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department Capt. William Carter said they do not suspect any foul play. Cameras in the area caught footage of Williams walking toward the river dock, he said. They also obtained the last message he sent, he said, where he said he was walking on the ice and sent a picture.
Around 1 p.m. on Jan. 3, an officer identified what looked to be a person under the water’s surface while conducting a drone search. A dive team and first responders then recovered the body, and family members identified him as Williams.
Capt. William Carter speaks after Robert “RJ” Williams Jr. found in White River
Capt. William Carter speaks on Saturday, Jan. 3, 2026, in Broad Ripple.
“That’s obviously a heartbreaking development in a case that has deeply affected our community. It’s not the outcome we had hoped for,” Carter said. “We do extend our deepest condolences to his family and loved ones.”
The discovery ended over three weeks of police and community search efforts. On Jan. 2, IMPD confirmed it was shifting to a recovery process, believing he fell into the river. Detectives and IMPD’s K9s searched the area and located a backpack and gym bag belonging to the teen on a dock along White River, police said previously.
Steps away from the river, Madison said it was difficult to know they had been searching for weeks, but he was so close. She said he loved video games and was close with her son. She stressed how close she and Williams were, being both his caregiver and basketball coach, and how she was more than an aunt.
“RJ was loving, caring, and he would do anything for anybody. He didn’t like people to be bullied,” she said. “He loved his dad and his mom and his sisters, all his family very much. RJ was loved by everybody that he came in contact with.”
Now, with closure that he was found, Madison said his family will try to move on. She asked that people with relatives who have mental disabilities keep them close and make sure they are aware of their surroundings.
The case rallied many in the community. Dozens of neighbors have gathered on multiple occasions to search the area and put up posters.
“It means a lot to us because people just came out of nowhere asking to help look for him,” she said. “People we didn’t even know, never met, that was willing to help. They have literally been helping us every single day, looking for him.”
Several of those who sought to find Williams showed up to pray and give support Saturday as police retrieved his body. Debra Porter, who knew the family through school, said the neighborhood came out to uplift the family, and she said she hopes this tragedy brings the community closer.
“Our heart goes out to another mother. Our heart goes out to another family. Our hearts go out to those that are suffering. That’s where our hearts are,” she said. “We come together as one another, just embracing one another and supporting.”
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