Indianapolis, IN
Previewing the New York Jets’ Opposition: Indianapolis Colts
With their playoff hopes on life support, the New York Jets can slightly improve their outlook heading into their bye week with a win over the 4-6 Indianapolis Colts, who have lost three games in a row. The last time these teams met, the Colts won 45-30 with Mike White and Josh Johnson at quarterback for the Jets.
Let’s break down the Colts’ roster going position by position:
Quarterbacks
The Colts shook things up this week by announcing that Anthony Richardson would be back in as the starter at quarterback. Last year’s fourth overall pick made six starts already this year but only completed 44 percent of his passes and had seven interceptions while also fumbling six times.
However, he’s had some spectacular plays, and his athleticism and arm make him a constant big play threat. He isn’t necessarily a run-first quarterback, but he does have 17 first downs and a touchdown as a runner this year.
Prior to being benched, ex-Jet Joe Flacco posted a quarterback rating of over 90 but lost three of four starts. The Colts had four turnovers including a Flacco pick-six in their 10-point loss to the Buffalo Bills on Sunday. That was the only game they’ve had all year which was decided by more than eight points.
Sam Ehlinger is the number three. He’s started three games in his career, but he lost all three of them.
Offensive Line
The Colts have some injury issues on their offensive line at the moment, with Pro Bowl center Ryan Kelly recently having joined right guard Will Fries, who started the first five games, on injured reserve. In addition, left tackle Bernhard Raimann – who already missed one start this year – left last week’s game with a knee injury and has been missing from practice this week.
Third round rookie Matt Goncalves filled in for Raimann last week and previously made a start in his place, so he’ll be on standby.
Another rookie, fourth rounder Tanor Bortoloni, has already been filling in for Kelly at center and doing a pretty good job. Dalton Tucker took over from Fries as the starting right guard.
Left guard Quenton Nelson and right tackle Braden Smith have been healthy all year, though. Nelson is a six-time Pro Bowler, but Smith has 10 penalties and has given up a team-high four sacks this year.
Blake Freeland is the other backup at tackle, having started several times last year. Danny Pinter is the main reserve inside.
The Colts only have eight offensive linemen on the roster, so someone will obviously need to be elevated from the practice squad if Raimann can’t go.
Running Backs
Jonathan Taylor is still one of the top running backs around. He has over 600 rushing yards in just seven games, with four 100-yard games. He’s scored a team-high five rushing touchdowns and is averaging almost five yards per carry.
Backups Tyler Goodson and Trey Sermon have combined to catch 21 passes, but Sermon is averaging just 2.8 yards per carry. Goodson has fared much better with a 4.7 yards per carry average.
Pass catchers
The Colts have some big play threats in their receiving corps as they have four touchdowns of over 50 yards this year. Alec Pierce, who has a team-high 516 receiving yards and four touchdown catches, is leading the league in yards per catch, but it’s Josh Downs who leads them in receptions with 45.
Michael Pittman, who has averaged over a thousand receiving yards over the past three years, hasn’t been as productive this year but does have 30 receptions. He returned to practice this week after missing the last game.
Adonai Mitchell, who was the Colts’ second round pick, is the number four receiver with 18 receptions, but he has a catch rate of less than 50 percent.
The other two receivers on the roster are Ashton Dulin and another rookie, Anthony Gould, but both contribute mostly on special teams.
At tight end, Kylen Granson is listed as the starter after catching 30 passes last year. However, Mo Alie-Cox has seven catches to lead a group of four tight ends who have combined for 23 receptions. Will Mallory and Drew Ogletree are the other two tight ends on the roster.
Defensive Line
The Colts’ starting lineup has Kwity Paye and Dayo Odeyingbo at defensive end and Grover Stewart and Pro Bowler DeForest Buckner on the inside. All four of these have either three or 3.5 sacks. Odeyingbo currently leads the team in quarterback hits with 11 and Stewart is arguably having his best ever season as he leads them with eight tackles for loss. Paye was second on the team with 8.5 sacks last year.
The bench includes first round pick Laiatu Latu, who already has two sacks. However, Tyquan Lewis – who began the season as a starter – is on injured reserve.
Adetomiwa Adebawore, Taven Bryan and Raekwon Davis have all seen plenty of action on the inside, while Adam Gotsis, Isaiah Land and Genard Avery provide depth on the edge, although none of those three have played 100 snaps yet.
Linebackers
Zaire Franklin anchors the defense with a team-high 105 tackles, having led the Colts with 179 last season. EJ Speed also basically plays a full-time role as he has 88 tackles and six tackles for loss.
Grant Stuard recently moved into the rotation after rookie Jaylon Carlies went onto injured reserve. He made an immediate impact with 19 tackles in his first career start.
Backups Cameron McGrone and Segun Olubi have primarily been special teamers.
Defensive Backs
The Colts’ starters at safety are Julian Blackmon and Nick Cross. Blackmon led the team last year with four interceptions and eight pass breakups. Cross is a full-time starter for the first time after making four starts in his first two seasons.
The outside cornerbacks are Jaylon Jones and Samuel Womack. Jones, who was a seventh round pick last year, has a team-high nine pass breakups but also leads the team with five defensive penalties.
Nickelback Kenny Moore might be the most important player in the secondary. The 2021 Pro Bowler had two pick-sixes last year and returned a fumble for a touchdown last week, so he’s the kind of player who can make a game-altering play from the slot.
Cornerback Chris Lammons and safety Rodney Thomas have seen some action off the bench, while last year’s second round pick Juju Brents started one game before landing on injured reserve.
Safety Ronnie Harrison and cornerbacks Darren Hall and David Long round out the secondary.
Special Teams
The Colts’ kicking game has been solid this year as punter Rigoberto Sanchez is putting up career-best numbers for gross and net average and Matt Gay has made all 34 kicks from inside 50 yards. He is 2-for-5 from beyond 50.
Dulin is the primary gunner in kick coverage and leads the team with five special teams tackles. Olubi, Granson and Ogletree are also productive contributors.
In the return game, Goodson is listed as the kickoff returner with Downs as the punt returner. Gould is the primary backup for each role. Downs is averaging just under 11 yards per punt return while the longest kickoff return of the year was actually a 55-yarder by Dulin.
Stuard scored a touchdown on a punt that was blocked by Cross last season.
Indianapolis, IN
DC BLOX cuts building from data center plans near Irvington, makes environmental pledges
See video of a proposed DC Blox data center campus on Indianapolis’ east side
The site of a proposed DC Blox three-building data center campus sits Thursday, April 23, 2026, at 305 Fintail Drive in Indianapolis.
A week ahead of a key vote, the company that seeks to build a data center near Irvington has removed an entire building from its site plan in response to community backlash.
The scaled-back proposal from Atlanta-based DC BLOX consolidates three facilities into two and will feature 25 fewer backup diesel generators, a roughly 35% reduction in electricity demand, and a larger buffer zone south of the Pennsy Trail and an adjacent elementary school.
The company still expects the project to create up to 600 construction jobs and bring about $2 billion in investment — a mix of construction costs and clients’ spending on computing equipment to store data. But the new proposal will create 17 permanent jobs, about half as many as originally planned.
“These layout changes represent a proactive step by DC BLOX that addresses community feedback regarding neighborhood density, utility capacity, and visual impact,” spokeswoman Nichole Thomas said in a July 8 press release, “while maintaining the massive economic and tax-base advantages of the $2 billion tech infrastructure investment.”
The change comes a week before the company’s use variance request is set for a vote in a July 15 Metropolitan Development Commission hearing. The original plans called for three buildings spanning 410,000 square feet, requiring 56 diesel generators and close to 80 megawatts of power demand.
If the plans at 305 Fintail Drive are approved, the company says the first building, a one-story facility between about 70,000-80,000 square feet, will likely be finished within two years. The second building, a two-story roughly 250,000-square-foot center, could begin construction in 2029 and be finished by 2031. Together, they would use an estimated 31 generators and about 50 megawatts.
Community backlash prompts environmental pledges
Many east-side residents have organized against the planned data center for months, packing a June 11 meeting where the company received preliminary approval. Among their chief complaints are that the data center could bring noise, air pollution and a spike in local electricity demand within a mile of thousands of residences while creating relatively few jobs.
DC BLOX has touted the tax benefits and union construction jobs a data center campus would bring to a blighted industrial site, where more popular uses like housing or a park are prohibited by state law. They say the finished campus, at the site of a former Ford manufacturing plant, would be “among the largest property-tax contributors” in Warren Township and Marion County.
The company recently pledged 20 commitments, including to pay 100% of its utility costs, protect air quality by capturing 95% of particulate emissions on diesel generators, and to minimize water usage with a closed-loop or waterless system to cool its whirring computers. DC BLOX would also contribute $100,000 over five years to Pennsy Trail improvements and a “multi-million dollar investment … to meet priority needs of the community.”
While many residents demand a moratorium on new data centers, the city recently advanced regulations on the unprecedented developments.
A proposal moving through the Indianapolis City-County Council aims to keep the facilities at least 400 feet away from protected districts like neighborhoods, limit sound levels to 65 decibels and require detailed site plans that address common concerns like water and energy usage. Councilors plan to hear public comment on the regulations at the July 13 Metropolitan and Economic Development Committee meeting, where the proposal could be advanced to the full council for a vote in August.
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Email Indianapolis City Hall Reporter Jordan Smith at JTSmith@indystar.com. Follow him on X @jordantsmith09 and Bluesky @jordanaccidentally.bsky.social.
Indianapolis, IN
Indiana officials call for action after 2 children die in retention ponds
INDIANAPOLIS (WRTV) — Retention ponds are a common feature in neighborhoods across Indiana, but they can pose a deadly danger to children. Two Indianapolis children have drowned in retention ponds in just the past month. Many communities are asking whether enough is being done to prevent these tragedies.
The Lawrence Fire Department was on the scene when a 19-month-old toddler was found in the retention pond at the 7000 block of McIntosh Lane on Indy’s northeast side. Adrian Douglas Breed Jr. later died in the hospital.
“It’s a tragic event, the family lost their son,” Marc Hickson of the Lawrence Fire Department said.
Democratic Senator J.D. Ford tried pushing for legislation to mandate safety barriers around neighborhood retention ponds in 2025. It required homeowners’ associations with children ages 1-4 to put up at least a 4-foot-tall fence or barrier, but it didn’t get a hearing.
“Unfortunately, this is the second child in a retention pond in central Indiana in just one month. At some point, we have to ask what we can do to stop families from experiencing the same, and that’s why we tried to pass this bill to help avoid families from experiencing the headlines.”
In 2009, former Republican State Senator Richard Bray also introduced a bill aimed at allowing the construction of safety barriers around retention ponds. That failed to become law.
Since those attempts, there have been no statewide laws for barriers around retention ponds in Indiana.
“It’s about asking adults, neighborhoods, and policymakers to make these environments safer. There is a petition out there, and I think second to that is to reach out to your state representatives and state senators and voice concerns about this type of issue,” Ford said.
Until a new law passes, the Lawrence Fire Department is urging parents to learn CPR and to teach their kids to swim. Hickson believes a safety barrier can prevent additional deaths.
“Just not apartment complexes, but anywhere, where there’s a body of water. It would be great if it were enclosed so access wouldn’t be as easy to get into.”
Indianapolis, IN
Advocates say new public camping ban criminalizes homelessness
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) — Advocacy groups supporting homeless populations are warning about the potential effects of a new law banning camping in public areas.
Senate Enrolled Act 285 now makes it a misdemeanor to camp, sleep on or use public land as long-term shelter.
JJ and Jennifer Goodall have been homeless on and off for the last eight years.
“It makes me wonder what’s going through people’s heads now,” JJ said.
Under the law, someone caught camping on public land would first receive a warning and information about available resources.
They would have 48 hours to leave at least 300 feet away. They then could face 60 days in jail and a $500 fine.
Sanctuary Indy is a nonprofit with a mission to help solve homelessness throughout Indianapolis. Founder Michelle Shelburne says the SEA 285 is a step in the wrong direction and effectively criminalizes homelessness.
“I know a lot of individuals through our street outreach that will be filling up our jail system to be arrested,” Shelburne said. “Then [they have] nowhere to go. I don’t see that as a viable solution for our housing crisis.”
The Goodalls’ struggle is amplified because JJ can’t work. He takes care of Jennifer full-time. She lost vision in both of her eyes years ago.
Earlier this year, they were connected with Sanctuary Indy’s support services, including nutritionists and a financial advisor.
“We were living in the dumpster area of the Dollar Tree,” Jennifer said. “Stacy, their outreach advocate, came by and started talking to us, and it just all happened from there.”
Part of the nonprofit’s work includes developing Circle City Village, a housing complex for homeless people and families.
Later this year, the Goodalls will be among the first residents to move into six tiny homes for couples and individuals.
Plans for the village’s second phase include five duplexes for ten families.
“They lifted us up and gave us a lot of hope right now, so we’re holding on to that right now,” JJ said.
They know people who rely on public spaces for shelter. Both are worried about what the new law will mean for others in their situation.
“There’s no real safe place that you can sleep, especially if you’re outside,” Jennifer said. “To do that to those people who are already down as far as they can possibly get is not right.”
According to data from the Fair Housing Center of Central Indiana, Marion County is short 33,600 housing units for households at or below 30% of the area median income.
Shelburne is urging lawmakers to see the real people impacted.
“We need more help starting from the ground up,” Shelburne said. “Not coming up with band-aid solutions that are just going to increase our crisis.”
The first phase of construction on Circle City Village is scheduled to be completed this summer.
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