Home

Monday, November 17, 2025

Eleven Park at Grand Park

In May 2023, Indy Eleven had an official groundbreaking ceremony on the Eleven Park site, formerly the Diamond Chain factory, with a stated goal of having the stadium open in time for the women's USL Super League team to start their inaugural season in the league in August 2025. At the time, I thought it was optimistic for them to meet that goal given that I knew from colleagues in my business that the stadium was still under design. I had no idea that nearly 900 days later, there wouldn't be a stadium and because there was no stadium, there wouldn't be a USL Super League team. Since my article in June 2023 talking about the groundbreaking, I've written 7 other articles talking either about the stadium, or more specifically, the lack of a stadium. Admittedly, one of those was poking fun at the easter egg items in the renderings for the stadium, but all the others discussed the lack of progress on the stadium that hasn't occurred after the Mayor of Indianapolis railroaded the team's plan for the Professional Sports Development Area and took it over for himself as he attempts to get a MLS team to Indy including one article last year around this exact same time discussing the Henry Street Bridge plan versus Indy's lack of plan. To date, that has been an unsuccessful task for the Mayor, but the Indianapolis Metropolitan Development Commission did recently vote to allow the City to purchase the downtown heliport, long suspected to be the preferred City location for an MLS stadium, and there have been other steps to prepare for a team that likely may never come, such as the Capital Improvement Board issuing a Request for Proposal in July related to the construction of the proposed stadium.

Since my article last year, there hasn't been a single announcement from Indy Eleven about their plan for Eleven Park, if there even is a plan for Eleven Park. In the sarcastic words of Roz, "you're stunned silence is very reassuring." 

So if there isn't a plan for the land at the Diamond Chain/Greenlawn Cemetery site, and all indications (none) would imply that that there isn't a plan for the site, but if we assume that a plan does exist for the team to continue working towards having its own stadium, then where will it be located? Arguments could be made for the Sand Street location and I have even taken a fresh look at what could be done at the Carroll Stadium site. Carroll Stadium is obviously still owned by Indiana University so that doesn't make it an ideal location if you're trying to control the scheduling, financing, and the income of the stadium. When Indy Eleven needed a place to start their life as a new club, Carroll Stadium was a good choice, and I wrote a tribute to the stadium in 2018 when the club transitioned from the NASL to the USL and from Carroll Stadium to Lucas Oil Stadium. Back then though, the 2012 IUPUI Master Plan had the grandstand of the stadium being removed:

"To create visual connectivity to the riverfront park, it is recommended that the Michael A. Carroll Stadium grand stands be removed. The track will remain and be improved as part of the active recreational portion of the park."

Indy Eleven saved the grand stand of Carroll Stadium. They made it better. The team transitioned to a much "better" stadium for a bit when they played in Lucas Oil Stadium, but then returned to the spiritual home of the team. The spiritual home of the team, though, is starting to feel like a final resting place instead of a home, and the long-time fans want to see the stadium promise come true.  

At one point, it might have been logistically possible for Ersal and the team to purchase the stadium from IU, but that no longer seems to be a potential. There was a follow-up study to the 2012 Master Plan and then a 2020 update to the Master Plan that viewed the stadium in a different light. Admittedly, the update occurred during the period when Indy was playing in Lucas Oil Stadium, so now that Indy is back in Carroll, there might be yet another update to the Master Plan in the works. However, the language from the 2020 Master Plan updated indicated (emphasis mine):

"A follow-up 2019 study identified the needs of the campus, as well as the needs of the Indianapolis amateur sports community which are lacking on campus and in the community. A flexible, multi-sport fieldhouse which could accommodate competition basketball, hockey, and gymnastics, as well as other sports was proposed south of the Herron School of Art and Design. [editor: this is currently in construction] The location reinforces the Sports District along the White River and offers great community access. 

The 2019 study also identified the need to improve Carroll Stadium with amenities, support spaces, and improved service. The study also identified the opportunity to develop an improved image and access to the stadium from the White River Trail which could flip the “front door” of the stadium towards the river and the trail. A new event plaza is proposed which can be used before events at the stadium and used as a space for the community who are using the trail."

While improved amenities, support spaces, and service would all be welcome additions for fans who have been using the facility the past 12 Indy Eleven seasons, this doesn't get Ersal and the team any closer to having their own stadium where they have more control over it. As I look at it though, a yet again reimagined look to the stadium could fit well in the existing space, particularly if you think about something that I mentioned a few years ago talking about my journey into watching the Scottish Professional Soccer League.

Tynecastle Park - Google Earth 3D Rendering
Tynecastle Park. 

For those that don't know, Tynecastle Park is the stadium where the Heart of Midlothian play their home games.

Let me back up one more step. Heart of Midlothian is a club that plays in the top level of the Scottish Professional League and are currently sitting at the top of the table above even Rangers or Celtic. 

Okay, back to Tynecastle Park. When I asked Nicky Law and Nick Ross about some of their favorite Scottish stadiums, they both, independently from each other, listed Tynecastle as one of their favorites. Sean McAuley spent 1992 - 1995 in St. Johnstone in the SPFL and he told me that Tynecastle was one of his favorites too ("Good history and I always played well there!!!"). Tynecastle has a capacity of approximately 20,000, with a length of 98 m (107.2 yd) and a width of 68 m (74.4 yd). Check out these couple of videos (the 2nd one is a lot of talking, so depending on your level of focus, you might want to skim through it).

Rough Sketch of Tynecastle at Carroll Stadium Location
https://youtu.be/O1-Zh-o1YKE?si=DOjgRknWLJsIUa29
https://youtu.be/bnyNuvvfPFY?si=A700kcdE_O0BaYNS

Why am I talking about Tynecastle Park so much? Because I think it would fit nicely in the space of what is available at Carroll Stadium. The boxy nature, and some of the other Scottish football stadiums for that matter, make that style of stadium a good fit in a location like Carroll Stadium, because there isn't a lot of extra building extending out where not necessary. I would love to see this kind of stadium for Indy Eleven, but then I've already said that before in my journey into the SFPL article.

Which is all leading up to my current thought for an Indy Eleven stadium. You saw the name of the article, so I'm sure you saw where this was going.

Grand Park. 

Or more specifically now, Droplight Grand Park Sports Campus, as it was announced this past week that Grand Park Sports & Entertainment had entered into a naming rights partnership with Droplight. Whatever you want to call it, I've come around to the idea that it's the right place for Indy Eleven to call home moving forward. 

Earlier this year, Grand Park released a Master Plan that included a massive expansion of the facilities. An expansion around the campus that includes parking garages, housing, offices, a park with a ferris wheel, an indoor ice arena, and most notably as it relates to this article, a 10,000-seat multi-purpose stadium. 

A 10,000-seat multi-purpose stadium that would be located at the intersection of 186th Street and Grand Park Boulevard, that would be "visible from the eastern approach along E 186th Street, [that] announces your arrival at the Grand Park District." Just north of the stadium, Ed Carpenter Racing has already agreed to build a new "76,000-square-foot state-of-the-art facility for all racing operations, engineering, and technical development." Part of that project also includes a new City-funded parking garage to replace the parking lots that are intended to go away with the Master Plan expansion plans. As a sidenote, I do wonder what that will do for the frequent RVs that are parked in the lots that families use when they are participating in events at the facility. 

My suggestion is to forego the 10,000-seat stadium, but rather build a 15,000-seat stadium to serve as Indy Eleven's new permanent home that would allow them to meet the standards to be part of the USL First Division league when it officially starts in 2028. First Division clubs in the United States are required to have 15,000 seats to qualify for First Division status. 

Many people will say, and have said when I floated this idea on X, that if Indy made that move, they would no longer go to games. I'm sorry, but this now makes the most sense to me. Whatever kind of relationship Ersal thought that he had with the previous and current Mayors of Indianapolis was flipped on its head when the current Mayor, Mayor Hogsett, took over the PSDA that was created specifically with Indy Eleven in mind. The current pissing match of egos likely means neither wants to back down, but it could be at the detriment of Indy Eleven if Ersal doesn't reconsider the path that he and the team have been taking since the days when Peter Wilt suggested a stadium before the team had ever played a single game. It has always been stated that the stadium was going to be in Indianapolis. That can be the path until it isn't.

Would Peter Wilt, the man who had learned from his Chicago days that a stadium in the suburb could be problematic and engrained that lesson into Ersal, agree with me? I didn't ask him, but this isn't Peter's team any longer. This club feels like it's floundering to find its footing of who it wants to be, and maybe that means moving to Westfield and Grand Park to reestablish themselves.

Why does this make sense to me?

"The City of Westfield is pleased to announce a transformative long-term collaboration with multiple partners, including Indianapolis-based Keystone Group, Indy Sports & Entertainment, Indy Eleven, and Bullpen Ventures, solidifying a landmark public-private partnership. 

... 

Grand Park and Indy Eleven have long-established relationships, with the multipurpose sports campus serving as the Indy Eleven’s Official Training Center. Indy Sports & Entertainment intends to build a new world-class training facility at Grand Park that will become the official training home of the Indy Eleven and the new women’s professional team that will play in the Super League.

... 

The City of Westfield will retain ownership of Grand Park, with the terms of the partnership outlining Grand Park Sports & Entertainment’s commitment to the development and management of the campus for up to forty years, valued at 300 million dollars to the City of Westfield.

This collaboration symbolizes a strategic convergence between public and private entities, poised to propel Grand Park into a new era of excellence, growth, and community engagement."

The only thing that has been in Indianapolis for Indy Eleven is 1) their official HQ where the majority of the front office staff resides, 2) the men's first team playing at Carroll Stadium, 3) an empty Diamond Chain lot that will likely be too cost prohibitive to ever build what they wanted to build in Eleven Park, and 3) a Mayor who no longer cares about the potential $1B in investment that was going to go into the Eleven Park campus. The remainder of the Indy Eleven enterprise happens within Grand Park, including now having the owner's other company collaborating on the development and management of the campus. Everything that they had envisioned doing with Eleven Park is incorporated into the Grand Park Master Plan.

To me, the question isn't why should Indy move to Westfield and Grand Park, the question is why shouldn't they? Putting the stadium at Grand Park consolidates everybody into a single location from men's first team to women's team(s), to the Academy, and training facilities. If you want to go to an Indy Eleven game, regardless of who it is playing, you go to one place.

Will they lose some of the fans from south side of Indianapolis? Probably. Could they pick up more fans from north of Indy? Probably.

The counties of Hamilton (where Grand Park is located) and Boone and Madison (the two adjacent counties) account for a 2020 census population of approximately 550,000 people. The similarly located counties south of Indianapolis and Marion County (Morgan, Johnson, and Shelby) account for approximately 279,000 people. Just in a sheer numbers game, catering to the northern fans makes sense. When I asked the Indy front office if they would share with me heat map numbers of season ticket holders based on zip codes, I was, not surprisingly, told they wouldn't share that information with me. They did say, however, "I can at least provide top-line feedback that we do draw very well from North of the City especially and that base is continuing to grow."

Placing a stadium in that base is only going to help.

The excavation for the Henry Street bridge project recently completed its "Archaeologist-led excavation, rather than Contractor-led excavation" and uncovered more than 1,700 grave shafts. ("Grave Shaft: A burial area consisting of a rectangular pit with vertical sides; also known as a grave, a grave shaft can contain one, multiple, or no human remains within it."). The excavation also unearthed some of the concrete supports for the Federal League Park baseball stadium from 1914 (yes, the site was also used for a baseball stadium more than a century ago), so it seems realistic that the Eleven Park site could also be littered with building supports in addition to the unknown quantity of human remains that are likely more extensive than previously suspected since the Henry Street project had almost 3 times the amount that was originally anticipated to be expected. The cost to excavate the approximately 18-acre site to find every human remain would be astronomical and beyond what Ersal and Indy Eleven are capable or willing to do. 

There's an obvious level of irony that it's a cemetery that has caused the death of a development project, but it doesn't have to be the death of the stadium. The human remains from Greenlawn have been reinterred over the years and there's no reason that the remains of Eleven Park can't be relocated somewhere else too.

To me, the logical new location is Grand Park. I would like it to look like some version of Tynecastle Park. I think that version of a stadium would work nicely at Grand Park.



Tuesday, November 11, 2025

Indy Eleven 2025 Season Recap & 2026 Off-Season Outlook

I concluded the 2024 season recap with the following statement:

With a year under his belt, and a Top 4 finish in the conference, McAuley’s expectations for next season are going to go up. If other fans are like me, you would like to match those expectations, but history of the club has made that a difficult proposition. We have grown to accept that the setbacks happen just as frequently as the breakthroughs. However, the team improved from year 1 to year 2 under Rennie, and then did the same thing under Lowry (after the requisite setbacks in year 3 and 4 under Rennie…). 

Then wouldn't you know it, toward the end of August, as it started becoming clear that reality was deviating from expectations, I wrote an article about expectations, spelling out why it might be unreasonable for Indy to be burdened with the constant expectation that they be towards the top of the table. History has consistently shown that being at the top of the table is the exception not the norm for the team. Indy is more frequently a middle to bottom resident on the table, with only sporadic forays at the top, and even more infrequent and consistent participants in the league's postseason. 

This year proved to be no different. A Top 4 finish in league play and a run to a semifinal game in the U.S. Open Cup last year with a bulk of the key components of the roster returning this year gave rise to the expectation that Indy should once again be challenging for a league championship this year. As I indicated in my Expectation vs Reality article from when it was said to me, "Conflict arises when expectations exceed reality." 

As the injury bug began to rear its head, the club made no signings to help take the burden off the healthy players until September 3rd, when the team had not choice but to pick up a few loaned players from MLS NextPro teams. The club's expectations of being a top club had been met with "just making due" and budget issues until it could no longer do anything but try and find a few players to round out game day rosters. When the new players were immediately thrown into the starting lineup, it was made visible that Coach McAuley hadn't had enough players to help make game-to-game and in-game adjustments. Yet the loanees weren't enough to settle things and the team finished the final third of the season consistently inconsistent with a 4W-0D-6L record in the final 10 games, including a loss in the final game of the season against Orange County after the door had been opened for them to sneak into the playoffs with a win. Instead, Indy's defeat allowed Detroit to take the final spot in the Eastern Conference, who then took that opening and defeated Louisville in Louisville to bounce the Players' Shield winners in their earliest exit in the history of that club. Proving just how important it is to get into the playoffs in this league. In a one-off game, almost anything can happen.

Speaking about how anything can happen in a one-off game, that was how Indy found themselves out of the Jagermeister Cup as Indy lost to League One side Greenville Triumph after conceding a late goal in the 90th minute. After Greenville forced the Penalty Shootout, Sulte went the wrong way on every Greenville kick and Bryneus missed the team's 6th attempt, and Greenville moved on while Indy's season struggles continued. To that point, Indy had never trailed in the tournament and technically finished the tournament without an official loss, since the Greenville game is officially listed as a draw.

The theme of the 2025 season was missed opportunities. As I indicated in the Orange County recap, not counting the two games in the Jagermeister Cup where Indy conceded late goals that forced the team into penalty kicks, Indy lost 18 points from winning positions, most notably four games when Indy dropped points with just minutes (seconds?) remaining in the game:

  • April 5 draw North Carolina (90'+3') - 2 points lost
  • May 10 draw vs Sacramento (90'+6') - 2 points lost
  • June 21 loss vs Las Vegas (90') - 3 points lost
  • Aug 16 loss vs Loudoun (86') - 3 points lost
Indy also made life difficult for themselves in the Jagermeister Cup when they conceded late, the second of which meant that they were eliminated from the competition at home by a League One team.
  • June 28 "draw" vs Birmingham (90'+4') - win in PK Jagermeister
  • Aug 20 "draw" vs Greenville (90') - loss in PK Jagermeister

Indy's season could have been a lot different.

Coach McAuley has indicated a few times to me, "In football, if you stay the same, you're probably getting worse. So we need to improve next year and improve again and just keep improving."

2025 feels like a step backward from 2024 in many aspects. What happens this offseason could dictate whether 2026 is an improvement year or another backsliding year.

To that end, here are my thoughts when looking towards next season.

Looking to 2026

Stadium

Whatever I said last year about the stadium applies this year. What I said last year was that the stadium was in limbo, and fans didn't know what's going on. Nothing from that perspective has changed. Seemingly, outside of a couple of people, and I'm guessing even that number could be a stretch, nobody seems to know anything about the status of an Indy Eleven stadium. Or nobody is willing to tell me anything about the status of an Indy Eleven stadium. 

The lack of the stadium has meant the continued delay of a women's team, which lead to the departure of the club's most successful coach, persistent comments that the Carroll Stadium surface continues to be a difficult one to play on, and a more vocal frustration from fans who have been required to sit in "American Soccer's Greatest Dive Bar" that is losing its charm. Once a term of affection from fans, the idiosyncrasies of the stadium are starting to wear on fans.  

I have thoughts on the stadium. Coming soon.

Coach
A second season under Coach McAuley was still one of the more successful for an Indy Eleven coach, but reality didn't meet expectations. I don't think it matters. I fully expect McAuley to be back next year, trying to overcome the limitations that are set on Indy Eleven coaches with players. I don't think McAuley did enough to warrant being fired, I would guess a less-than-stellar second head coaching season doesn't have a lot of other teams trying to poach him, and I think he wants to be here. I hope he's back. I've enjoyed my experiences with him. 

I do think he will want to fix an issue that persisted into his second season. Last year, the 59 goals that the team scored were a club record setting total, but unfortunately, they conceded 56 goals. This year, the totals were nearly identical, with the team scoring 55 goals, but they conceded 56 across all competitions. In league play, the team was a -8 in goal differential. Coach is going to want to fix that, which I think he'll have the chance to do when he stays in Indy next season.

Players

I've had relatively decent success guessing which players will be returning in recent years, but when the players that I think could and should return struggled to ninth place in the table, this is one of those years where I could be completely wrong. I think Coach McAuley intends to bring back a core group of this year's team and then bring in new, younger and hungrier, players. Younger players looking to make a name for themselves or older players desperate to show they still have what it takes. McAuley's said some version of that to me and he's also said it on Soccer Saturday. The unknown for me is who he considers to be the most necessary of the "core."

The following is based entirely on my own opinions, but here are the players from this year's roster that I can envision being somewhere else or returning next year.

Gone:

  1. Bryneus - Oliver played just 448 minutes all season. Normally players that have that limited amount of time don't make the next year's roster.
  2. McRobb - the bulk of Finn's 519 minutes happened in a five-game stretch a third of the way into the season as he took his turn at trying to fill the left back role made available due to Stanley's season-ending injury. Once McAuley began to tweak the lineup and settled in on Quinn in that left winger role, McRobb's minutes dwindled to almost nothing. I would be surprised if he returns.
  3. Pruter - Late season loan; back to the Columbus Crew 2 mothership.
  4. Schaefer - Late season loan; back to Cincinnati 2
  5. Zalinsky - Late season loan; back to St. Louis CITY 2

Possibly Gone:

  1. Collier - The leader in the team's substitute appearances (by a wide margin) averaged just over 16 minutes per game in league play and didn't manage to score a goal all season. This was likely year two of a two-year contract and the limited minutes and lack of goals makes it difficult to imagine he returns for another year. At 30 years old, he may be looking for a team where he can find more minutes in what remains of a player's short career.
  2. Hogan - Pat averaged 65 minutes in league play and played in 19 games with 12 starts, but nearly all of those were early in the season. Hogan didn't make an appearance in the final 10 games of the season.
  3. Neidlinger - I guessed correctly that he would be part of the 2025 roster. However, the promise that he showed last year didn't translate to minutes this year, getting just 133 minutes in league play in 7 appearances off the bench. For a kid who accepted a contract to play professional soccer and gave up his college eligibility, he's going to want more minutes. Don't be surprised if you see his name on a League One roster next year trying to get those minutes.
  4. O'Brien, Josh - Was a versatile player that had a reasonable amount of minutes and games played. He wasn't a very expensive contract, so depending on how much that gets negotiated, my gut still tells me that O'Brien won't be around for 2026.
  5. Soumaoro - The arrival of Soumaoro last year pushed Lindley from the starting lineup. Soumaoro's injury this year, and the subsequent reshuffling of the lineup by McAuley, pushed Quinn into a winger role giving him more time to do what he does best which also allowed Lindley back onto the field showing his value. I can see Brem slide into the Returning camp, but for now, I think he doesn't return next year because I think Lindley does return and Lindley demonstrated his value.
  6. Sulte - This will, once again, depend highly on what Portland does with their goalkeeper situation. If they keep all the other guys, they might loan Sulte back to Indy yet again. If they saw enough out of him during his second year here, he might make his way to the Portland first team roster and he will have finished his time here in 2nd place in the team's shutout and saves lists behind Jon Busch.
  7. White - I know McAuley valued White in 2024, but his use this year was sporadic, even without taking into account his injury. He's another player that I could see slide into the Returning list, but for now I'm placing him in the Possibly Gone list.

Probably Returning:

  1. Blake - Unless other teams come calling with more money, which could be possible and likely, Blake is a "core" player to build around. 
  2. Charles-Cook - An outlier to the minimal minutes rule, I think Reice returns next season. He came here with a specific role in mind, that of a backup, but experienced, goalkeeper and he served that role well. He played reasonably well when called upon, including his 10 save game against the Philadelphia Union in the U.S. Open Cup, and he seemed to like his time here in Indiana. I think McAuley and the team keep him around.
  3. Lindley - All of what I said the past two year's applies: "A local guy who was a cornerstone of the roster this year. Cam wants to be in Indy closer to family. There aren't guarantees in the business of soccer, but Lindley returning next season might be close." In an episode of the Indy Eleven Coaches Show, McAuley said, "Two quick things I said to the players at the start of the season. Performance and attitude will keep you at the club. If one of them is not there, the one I'm choosing is attitude. If your performance is not there, but you've got a good attitude, you've got a good chance of staying. If your performance is there, and your attitude is not there, you're not staying. And if you've got both, then we've got a decent squad. Simple enough?" From my perspective, Lindley's attitude and talent are both there. I don't see how the team doesn't keep him around.
  4. Murphy - This season, the starting lineup became very predictable as injuries and performances dictated who would be on the field. For two years, you could basically put Murphy's name on the starting lineup in Sharpie. He finished the season having played in all 30 league games, all 5 Jagermeister Cup games, and 1 of 2 of the U.S. Open Cup games. His minutes did drop off a little at the end of the year, so I have to wonder if his fitness began to take a hit as the season drew to a close due to the minutes and miles he has put in over the past two years. Regardless, he'll be back. 
  5. Musa - Began to find a starter role in the tail end of the 2024 season and grabbed it with both hands in 2025. He played in one less game that Murphy, but played more minutes. The defense had a habit of leaking bad goals, but I still think he returns.
  6. Ofeimu - Indy conceded a lot of goals and at inopportune times, but I don't know how many I would consider to have been Ofeimu's fault. Just a guess, but I think he returns next season..
  7. Quinn - In the past two Soccer Saturday's with Rakestraw, Quinn was mentioned by McAuley or interviewed outright. In both instances it was said, while not "official" yet, Quinn will be back next year. It could be his last year here depending on how well his body holds up, but it might not be his last in Indy if there's a way to keep him around as he transitions to a coaching role.
  8. Rendon - The jump from League One to the Championship wasn't seamless and he had some moments where you could tell he was still adjusting. His pace and his ability to defend and go forward, make him a player that I think McAuley keeps around.
  9. Stanley - Other than Murphy, until his season-ending injury, Stanley was another you could put into the staring lineup with a Sharpie. Despite no data on which to evaluate him after the 8th game, I think Stanley will return.
I hear you. Where are the forwards? What do I think is going to happen with Amoh, Foster, Kizza, and Williams? I don't know which ones will be staying or leaving, but I would bet that only one or two of them return. I can make arguments for each of them, but I'm really not sure which one(s) McAuley values more than the others. My gut says it might be Foster and Williams even though Amoh was the second leading scorer in all competitions behind Blake. Foster's speed and desire to take on defenders sets him apart. Williams' hold-up play sets him apart. Who stays and who goes may have a lot to do with what players the team recruits to come to Indy.
  1. Amoh
  2. Foster
  3. Kizza
  4. Williams