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The 250 class came together in Salt Lake City for the final East/West Showdown of the 2026 Supercross season, and it quickly turned into one of the most eventful races of the night. Haiden Deegan grabbed the holeshot, but Max Anstie moved into the lead early before Deegan responded and took control out front. Cole Davies soon worked his way into second and began closing the gap, setting up a direct battle between the East and West champions. Behind them, Cameron McAdoo and Seth Hammaker were locked in a hard fight before Hammaker made a mistake in the whoops, sending both riders down and out of the race. Up front, Davies kept the pressure on Deegan, eventually made the pass, and then pulled away after Deegan went down while trying to answer back. Deegan remounted but made another mistake in the sand, dropping him to fourth. Davies went on to take the win, with Levi Kitchen finishing second, Anstie third, Deegan fourth, and Ryder DiFrancesco rounding out the top five.
The 450 class brought the championship fight to a dramatic close in Salt Lake City. Hunter Lawrence grabbed the holeshot, but Ken Roczen moved into the lead on the opening lap and immediately put himself in position to control the title fight. Lawrence stayed right on Roczen’s rear wheel through the early laps, while Jorge Prado and Chase Sexton began closing in behind them. As Prado got closer, Lawrence picked up the pace and started looking for a way around Roczen, knowing he could not afford to let another rider get between them. The race changed when Lawrence made a mistake and went off track, then went down later that same lap after over-jumping a rhythm section and tucking the front end. That dropped him back to seventh and gave Roczen the breathing room he needed. From there, Roczen managed the race with the championship in mind. Chase Sexton went on to take the win, with Justin Cooper second and Prado third, while Roczen brought it home fifth to secure the 2026 Supercross Championship.
2026 SALT LAKE CITY SUPERCROSS // FULL COVERAGE
250 WEST POINT STANDINGS (AFTER ROUND 10 OF 10)
Haiden Deegan put on a show for the fans in Salt Lake City.
Ryder DiFrancesco had a successful Supercross season.
Levi Kitchen kept things entertaining this year.
250 EAST POINT STANDINGS (AFTER ROUND 10 OF 10)
Cole Davies ended things on top. Time for him to prepare for outdoors.
The 250 East season was Cole Davies’ from the start, and as the rounds went on, he continued to prove he was the rider to beat. Seth Hammaker had the speed to keep the championship interesting and was one of the fastest riders in the class on multiple weekends, but Davies was the one who kept putting himself in the right position and taking care of business when it mattered. The biggest moment came in Philadelphia, where the conditions were tough, and the race had plenty of chaos, but Davies stayed composed and locked up the 250 East title with a win. Behind him, riders like Hammaker, Daxton Bennick, Coty Schock, and Nate Thrasher all had strong moments throughout the season, which made the class competitive from week to week. Davies then backed it all up in Salt Lake City during the East/West Showdown, going head-to-head with Haiden Deegan and coming out with the win. It was a strong way to finish the season and showed that Davies was not only consistent but also capable of winning when the pressure was at its highest.
| 1 | 37 | Cole Davies | 231 |
| 2 | 10 | Seth Hammaker | 180 |
| 3 | 58 | Daxton Bennick | 160 |
| 4 | 22 | Coty Schock | 140 |
| 5 | 25 | Nate Thrasher | 137 |
| 6 | 89 | Devin Simonson | 124 |
| 7 | 53 | Henry Miller | 104 |
| 8 | 30 | Jo Shimoda | 100 |
| 9 | 77 | Derek Kelley | 89 |
| 10 | 141 | Nicholas Romano | 72 |
| 11 | 163 | Pierce Brown | 63 |
| 12 | 65 | Marshal Weltin | 53 |
| 13 | 148 | Kyle Peters | 51 |
| 14 | 95 | Luke Neese | 47 |
| 15 | 73 | Gavin Towers | 46 |
| 16 | 101 | Luke Clout | 45 |
| 17 | 82 | Caden Dudney | 44 |
| 18 | 49 | Cullin Park | 40 |
| 19 | 180 | Landen Gordon | 36 |
| 20 | 91 | Izaih Clark | 32 |
| 21 | 87 | Jeremy Hand | 30 |
| 22 | 56 | Jalek Swoll | 27 |
| 23 | 492 | Landon Hartz | 26 |
| 24 | 35 | Drew Adams | 25 |
| 25 | 483 | Bryton Carroll | 13 |
| 26 | 90 | John Short | 13 |
| 27 | 751 | Evan Ferry | 9 |
| 28 | 174 | Luca Marsalisi | 9 |
| 29 | 39 | Valentin Guillod | 8 |
| 30 | 105 | Marcus Phelps | 7 |
| 31 | 832 | Leum Oehlhof | 7 |
| 32 | 775 | CJ Benard | 7 |
| 33 | 296 | Ryder Floyd | 6 |
| 34 | 188 | Hamden Hudson | 6 |
| 35 | 511 | Jace Kessler | 4 |
| 36 | 140 | Russell Buccheri | 4 |
| 37 | 80 | Bryce Shelly | 2 |
| 38 | 300 | Jonathan Getz | 2 |
| 39 | 59 | Casey Cochran | 2 |
Seth Hammaker was a warrior throughout the season.
Landon Gordon was one of the best rookie showings we’ve seen in a long time.
450 POINT STANDINGS (AFTER ROUND 17 OF 17)
Ken Roczen takes home his first 450 premier class championship.
The 450 season came down to Ken Roczen and Hunter Lawrence, and it stayed tight all the way to the final gate drop in Salt Lake City. Roczen had moments early in the year where he looked strong, but it was his late-season push that really changed the championship. He started stacking big results when it mattered most and put himself back in control of the red plate. Hunter Lawrence was right there the entire time and kept the pressure on, especially with his Denver win that cut the points gap down to just one heading into the finale. Cooper Webb, Eli Tomac and Chase Sexton all had their moments throughout the season as well, but by the time the series reached Salt Lake City, the title fight was clearly between Roczen and Lawrence. In the main event, Lawrence grabbed the holeshot, but Roczen moved into the lead early and put himself in position to control the championship. Lawrence stayed close until a mistake took him off track, then another crash dropped him back and gave Roczen the room he needed. Chase Sexton went on to win the race, but Roczen brought it home in the position he needed and walked away as the 2026 Supercross Champion.
| 1 | 94 | Ken Roczen | 349 |
| 2 | 96 | Hunter Lawrence | 346 |
| 3 | 1 | Cooper Webb | 315 |
| 4 | 3 | Eli Tomac | 275 |
| 5 | 32 | Justin Cooper | 273 |
| 6 | 4 | Chase Sexton | 237 |
| 7 | 27 | Malcolm Stewart | 204 |
| 8 | 17 | Joey Savatgy | 194 |
| 9 | 26 | Jorge Prado | 189 |
| 10 | 46 | Justin Hill | 188 |
| 11 | 14 | Dylan Ferrandis | 176 |
| 12 | 28 | Christian Craig | 154 |
| 13 | 12 | Shane McElrath | 150 |
| 14 | 36 | Garrett Marchbanks | 142 |
| 15 | 45 | Colt Nichols | 116 |
| 16 | 7 | Aaron Plessinger | 99 |
| 17 | 21 | Jason Anderson | 84 |
| 18 | 41 | Mitchell Harrison | 73 |
| 19 | 20 | Jordon Smith | 68 |
| 20 | 719 | Vince Friese | 66 |
| 21 | 15 | Dean Wilson | 60 |
| 22 | 62 | Grant Harlan | 48 |
| 23 | 24 | R.J. Hampshire | 38 |
| 24 | 51 | Justin Barcia | 33 |
| 25 | 78 | Kevin Moranz | 30 |
| 26 | 63 | Freddie Noren | 20 |
| 27 | 66 | Cole Thompson | 16 |
| 28 | 784 | Cade Clason | 14 |
| 29 | 711 | Tristan Lane | 13 |
| 30 | 33 | Austin Forkner | 12 |
| 31 | 52 | Mitchell Oldenburg | 6 |
| 32 | 891 | Justin Bogle | 5 |
| 33 | 44 | Ty Masterpool | 4 |
| 34 | 519 | Joshua Cartwright | 4 |
| 35 | 874 | Zack Williams | 2 |
| 36 | 87 | Jeremy Hand | 2 |
| 37 | 411 | Scott Meshey | 2 |
| 38 | 200 | Ryan Breece | 1 |
| 39 | 604 | Max Miller | 0 |
| 40 | 11 | Kyle Chisholm | 0 |
| 41 | 437 | Vinny Luhovey | 0 |
Hunter Lawrence took the championship down to the very last race, and his persistence was respected.
Cooper Webb was fairly silent in the series but was able to remain third overall.
















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