The AMA Supercross Championship (commercially known as Monster Energy AMA Supercross) is an American motorcycle racing series. Founded by the American Motorcyclist Association (AMA) in 1974, the AMA Supercross Championship races are held from January through early May. Supercross is a variant of motocross which involves off-road motorcycles on a constructed dirt track consisting of steep jumps and obstacles; the tracks are usually constructed inside a sports stadium. The easy accessibility and comfort of these stadium venues helped supercross surpass off-road motocross as a spectator attraction in the United States by the late 1970s.

From 2002 until 2021, the series was the World Championship of the sport. After not renewing its contract with the FIM, the series, along with the AMA Motocross Championship, formed the SuperMotocross World Championship from 2023.

History

The first motocross race held on a race track inside a stadium took place on August 28, 1948, at Buffalo Stadium in the Paris suburb of Montrouge. As the popularity of motocross surged in the United States in the late 1960s, Bill France Sr. added a professional motocross race to the 1971 Daytona Beach Bike Week schedule. It was billed as the "Super Bowl of Motocross" which led to the coining of the term "Supercross." The Super Bowl of Motocross II held the following year was an even greater success and, eventually evolved into the AMA Supercross championship held in stadiums across the United States and Canada. and Eli Tomac in the 2018 race.

Calendar

The series begins in early January and continues until early-May. It consists of 17 rounds, held in football and baseball stadiums across the US.

Beginning with Anaheim 1, the series holds two of its first five races at Angel Stadium before it heads eastwards. The series concludes in Salt Lake City in early May. The 250 class is split into two divisions, each with its own separate championship. Starting in 2025, there are three East-West Shootouts, where the best riders from each 250 division race one another. The series also holds a race in Daytona during Daytona Bike Week.

Event format

Each meet is structured similarly to Short track motor racing with two heat races and a consolation race in each class. In both classes, each heat race is six minutes plus one lap. Each heat features 20 riders (one may have 21 riders depending on qualifying results), with the top nine advancing to the feature. The other 22 riders are relegated to the consolation race, known as the Last Chance Qualifier, which is five minutes plus one lap, with the top four advancing to the final.

thumb|left|[[Ricky Carmichael dominated AMA Supercross throughout the mid-2000s, winning five titles]]

In the 450cc class, the highest placed competitor in points, provided he is in the top ten in national points, and has yet to qualify after either heat race or consolation race, will receive a provisional for the feature race. The feature race is 15 minutes plus one lap in the 250cc class, and 20 minutes plus one lap for the 450cc class, with 25 championship points for the race win. At 3 races per year a three race format is use. The rules are similar to the Monster Energy Cup individual scoring will determine the overall race winner.

For the season-ending East-West Showdown at Las Vegas for the 250cc class starting in May 2011, each region's top 20 will race in the non-championship event for a 15-minute heat race. Standard rules apply, with the feature race being 10 laps. In 2016, the East-West Showdown became a points-paying round where both regions' champions would be decided in the same feature. Starting in 2018, the combined East-West Showdown will also be held in the middle of the season, at the Indianapolis round.

Starting with the 2012 Season, riders who are in first place in the Series' Points Lead will use the red plate to race in the Series. Starting with the 2024 Season, the reigning champion from the SuperMotocross Championship in the 250cc & 450cc class, will use a purple plate with yellow numbers to signify their status as an SMX Champion.

If at any point during the Heat Races, LCQs or the Feature Races, that the race is red-flagged within less than 3 laps, the race will be a complete restart. However, if the race is red-flagged with more than 3 laps completed and the time has not expired and after a 10-minute delay, the race will be a staggered restart with riders lined up from the previous lap they went.

Track

The sport of Supercross is best described as motocross racing that takes place within the confines of a sports stadium. The tracks are typically shorter in length than a standard motocross track. They feature a combination of man-made obstacles such as whoop sections (where riders skim along the tops of multiple bumps), rhythm sections (irregular series of jumps with a variety of combination options), and triple jumps (three jumps in a row that riders normally clear in a single leap of 70 feet or more). Many of the turns have banked berms, but some are flat. It takes roughly five hundred truckloads of dirt to make up a supercross track. Soil conditions can be hard-packed, soft, muddy, sandy, rutted, or any combination thereof.

Television coverage

Current

In 2025, there are three broadcast partners from the NBC family of networks: NBC, USA Network and Peacock.

{| class="wikitable"

|-

!Network

!Coverage

|-

|NBC

|3 races live, season opener & 1 other round on delay

|-

|USA Network

|Season opener & finale live

|-

|Peacock

|Every race live

|-

|}

Source:

Previous

{| class="wikitable"

!Period

!Partners

|-

|2022-present

|NBC, USA Network, CNBC, Peacock

|-

|2019-2021

|NBC, NBCSN

|-

|2013-2018

|Fox Sports

|-

|2000s-2012

|Speed LIVE and CBS Sports select races next day on tape

|-

|1990s-2000s

|ESPN

|}

AMA Supercross Championship winners by year

Between 2008 and 2021 the AMA Supercross Championship was also designated an FIM World Championship. Lost FIM World Championship status in 2022 due to a rebooted world championship.

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Year

! 450cc Class<br />(formerly 250&nbsp;cc 2-stroke)

! 250cc West <br /><small>(formerly 125&nbsp;cc 2-stroke West)</small>

! 250cc East <br /><small>(formerly 125&nbsp;cc 2-stroke East)</small>

|-

| 2026

| Ken Roczen (Suzuki)

| Haiden Deegan (Yamaha)

| Cole Davies (Yamaha)

|-

| 2025

| Cooper Webb (Yamaha)

| Haiden Deegan (Yamaha)

| Tom Vialle (KTM)

|-

|2024

| Jett Lawrence (Honda)

| RJ Hampshire (Husqvarna)

| Tom Vialle (KTM)

|-

|2023

| Chase Sexton (Honda)

| Jett Lawrence (Honda)

| Hunter Lawrence (Honda)

|-

|2022

| Eli Tomac (Yamaha)

| Christian Craig (Yamaha)

| Jett Lawrence (Honda)

|-

|2021

| Cooper Webb (KTM)

| Justin Cooper (Yamaha)

| Colt Nichols (Yamaha)

|-

|2020

| Eli Tomac (Kawasaki)

| Dylan Ferrandis (Yamaha)

| Chase Sexton (Honda)

|-

|2019

| Cooper Webb (KTM)

| Dylan Ferrandis (Yamaha)

| Chase Sexton (Honda)

|-

|2018

| Jason Anderson (Husqvarna)

| Aaron Plessinger (Yamaha)

| Zach Osborne (Husqvarna)

|-

|2017

| Ryan Dungey (KTM)

| Justin Hill (Kawasaki)

| Zach Osborne (Husqvarna)

|-

|2016

| Ryan Dungey (KTM)

| Cooper Webb (Yamaha)

| Malcolm Stewart (Honda)

|-

|2015

| Ryan Dungey (KTM)

| Cooper Webb (Yamaha)

| Marvin Musquin (KTM)

|-

|2014

| Ryan Villopoto (Kawasaki)

| Jason Anderson (KTM)

| Justin Bogle (Honda)

|-

|2013

| Ryan Villopoto (Kawasaki)

| Ken Roczen (KTM)

| Wil Hahn (Honda)

|-

|2012

| Ryan Villopoto (Kawasaki)

| Eli Tomac (Honda)

| Justin Barcia (Honda)

|-

|2011

| Ryan Villopoto (Kawasaki)

| Broc Tickle (Kawasaki)

| Justin Barcia (Honda)

|-

|2010

| Ryan Dungey (Suzuki)

| Jake Weimer (Kawasaki)

| Christophe Pourcel (Kawasaki)

|-

|2009

| James Stewart Jr. (Yamaha)

| Ryan Dungey (Suzuki)

| Christophe Pourcel (Kawasaki)

|-

|2008

| Chad Reed (Yamaha)

| Jason Lawrence (Yamaha)

| Trey Canard (Honda)

|-

|2007

| James Stewart Jr. (Kawasaki)

| Ryan Villopoto (Kawasaki)

| Ben Townley (Kawasaki)

|-

|2006

| Ricky Carmichael (Suzuki)

| Grant Langston (Kawasaki)

| Davi Millsaps (Honda)

|-

|2005

| Ricky Carmichael (Suzuki)

| Ivan Tedesco (Kawasaki)

| Grant Langston (Kawasaki)

|-

|2004

| Chad Reed (Yamaha)

| Ivan Tedesco (Kawasaki)

| James Stewart Jr. (Kawasaki)

|-

|2003

| Ricky Carmichael (Honda)

| James Stewart Jr. (Kawasaki)

| Branden Jesseman (Suzuki)

|-

|2002

| Ricky Carmichael (Honda)

| Travis Preston (Honda)

| Chad Reed (Yamaha)

|-

|2001

| Ricky Carmichael (Kawasaki)

| Ernesto Fonseca (Yamaha)

| Travis Pastrana (Suzuki)

|-

|2000

| Jeremy McGrath (Yamaha)

| Shae Bentley (Kawasaki)

| Stéphane Roncada (Yamaha)

|-

|1999

| Jeremy McGrath (Yamaha)

| Nathan Ramsey (Kawasaki)

| Ernesto Fonseca (Yamaha)

|-

|1998

| Jeremy McGrath (Yamaha)

| John Dowd (Yamaha)

| Ricky Carmichael (Kawasaki)

|-

|1997

| Jeff Emig (Kawasaki)

| Kevin Windham (Yamaha)

| Tim Ferry (Suzuki)

|-

|1996

| Jeremy McGrath (Honda)

| Kevin Windham (Yamaha)

| Mickaël Pichon (Kawasaki)

|-

|1995

| Jeremy McGrath (Honda)

| Damon Huffman (Suzuki)

| Mickaël Pichon (Kawasaki)

|-

|1994

| Jeremy McGrath (Honda)

| Damon Huffman (Suzuki)

| Ezra Lusk (Suzuki)

|-

|1993

| Jeremy McGrath (Honda)

| Jimmy Gaddis (Kawasaki)

| Doug Henry (Honda)

|-

|1992

| Jeff Stanton (Honda)

| Jeremy McGrath (Honda)

| Brian Swink (Suzuki)

|-

|1991

| Jean-Michel Bayle (Honda)

| Jeremy McGrath (Honda)

| Brian Swink (Honda)

|-

|1990

| Jeff Stanton (Honda)

| Ty Davis (Honda)

| Denny Stephenson (Suzuki)

|-

|1989

| Jeff Stanton (Honda)

| Jeff Matiasevich (Kawasaki)

| Damon Bradshaw (Yamaha)

|-

|1988

| Rick Johnson (Honda)

| Jeff Matiasevich (Kawasaki)

| Todd DeHoop (Suzuki)

|-

|1987

| Jeff Ward (Kawasaki)

| Willie Surratt (Suzuki)

| Ron Tichenor (Suzuki)

|-

|1986

| Rick Johnson (Honda)

| Donny Schmit (Kawasaki)

| Keith Turpin (Suzuki)

|-

|1985

| Jeff Ward (Kawasaki)

| Bobby Moore (Suzuki)

| Eddie Warren (Kawasaki)

|-

|1984

| Johnny O'Mara (Honda)

| colspan="2" rowspan="8" |

|-

|1983

| David Bailey (Honda)

|-

|1982

| Donnie Hansen (Honda)

|-

|1981

| Mark Barnett (Suzuki)

|-

|1980

| Mike Bell (Yamaha)

|-

|1979

| Bob Hannah (Yamaha)

|-

|1978

| Bob Hannah (Yamaha)

|-

|1977

| Bob Hannah (Yamaha)

|-

|1976

| Jimmy Weinert (Kawasaki)

! colspan="2" |500cc Class

|-

|1975

| Jimmy Ellis (Can Am)

| colspan="2" | Steve Stackable (Maico)

|-

|1974

| Pierre Karsmakers (Yamaha)

| colspan="2" | Gary Semics (Suzuki)

|}

List of wins by manufacturer

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! 450cc Class<br />(formerly 250&nbsp;cc 2-stroke)

! 250cc West <br /><small>(formerly 125&nbsp;cc 2-stroke West)</small>

! 250cc East <br /><small>(formerly 125&nbsp;cc 2-stroke East)</small>

|-

| Honda (17)

| Kawasaki (14)

| Honda (11)

|-

| Yamaha (13)

| Yamaha (14)

| Kawasaki (9)

|-

| Kawasaki (11)

| Honda (6)

| Suzuki (9)

|-

| KTM (5)

| Suzuki (4)

| Yamaha (8)

|-

| Suzuki (5)

| KTM (2)

| KTM (3)

|-

| Husqvarna (1)

| Husqvarna (1)

| Husqvarna (2)

|}

Statistics

Supercross all-time wins list

Source:

Riders in bold have competed in the 2026 Supercross championship

† next to rider's name in the 250/125 Class column indicates rider has competed in the 2026 450 Supercross championship

{| class="wikitable"

! 450/250 Class !! Wins !! 250/125 Class !! Wins

|-

| Jeremy McGrath || 72

| James Stewart Jr. || 18

|-

| Eli Tomac|| 57

| Nathan Ramsey || 15

|-

| James Stewart Jr.|| 50

| Haiden Deegan || 14

|-

| Ricky Carmichael|| 48

| Jeremy McGrath|| 13

|-

| Chad Reed|| 44

| Jett Lawrence || 13

|-

| Ryan Villopoto|| 41

| Austin Forkner †|| 13

|-

| Ryan Dungey || 34

| Eli Tomac †|| 12

|-

| Cooper Webb|| 31

| Ryan Dungey|| 12

|-

| Ken Roczen|| 28

| Ricky Carmichael || 12

|-

| Ricky Johnson|| 28

| Kevin Windham|| 12

|-

| Bob Hannah|| 27

| Christophe Pourcel|| 12

|-

| Jeff Ward|| 20

| Brian Swink|| 12

|-

| Damon Bradshaw || 19

| Ernesto Fonseca|| 12

|-

| Kevin Windham || 18

| Hunter Lawrence †|| 12

|-

| Chase Sexton|| 18

| Damon Huffman || 12

|-

| Mark Barnett|| 17

| Cooper Webb † || 11

|-

| Jeff Stanton|| 17

| Justin Barcia †|| 11

|-

| Jean-Michel Bayle|| 16

| Ryan Villopoto|| 11

|-

| Jason Anderson|| 14

| Adam Cianciarulo|| 11

|-

| Ezra Lusk|| 12

| Marvin Musquin || 11

|-

| David Bailey|| 12

| Jeff Matiasevich|| 11

|-

| Mike Bell|| 11

| Mickaël Pichon|| 10

|-

| Mike LaRocco|| 10

| Ivan Tedesco|| 10

|-

| Marvin Musquin|| 10

| Shane McElrath †|| 9

|-

| Broc Glover|| 10

| Jake Weimer|| 9

|-

| Jett Lawrence|| 9

| Keith Turpin|| 8

|-

| Jimmy Ellis|| 8

| Dean Wilson|| 8

|-

| Johnny O'Mara || 7

| Travis Pastrana || 8

|-

| David Vuillemin || 7

| Denny Stephenson|| 8

|-

| Jeff Emig|| 7

| Justin Hill † || 8

|-

| Justin Barcia|| 6

| Cole Davies|| 8

|-

| Trey Canard || 5

| Davi Millsaps || 7

|-

| Davi Millsaps|| 5

| Grant Langston|| 7

|-

| Mike Kiedrowski|| 5

| Stéphane Roncada || 7

|-

| Kent Howerton|| 5

| Christian Craig †|| 7

|-

| Hunter Lawrence|| 5

| John Dowd|| 7

|-

| Darrell Schultz || 4

| Ezra Lusk || 7

|-

| Jimmy Weinert|| 4

| Doug Henry|| 7

|-

| Donnie Hansen|| 4

| Trey Canard || 7

|-

| Doug Henry|| 4

| Nate Thrasher|| 7

|-

| Larry Ward|| 3

| Josh Hansen|| 7

|-

| Marty Smith|| 3

| Dylan Ferrandis †|| 6

|-

| Marty Tripes|| 2

| Chase Sexton †|| 6

|-

| Aaron Plessinger|| 2

| Ken Roczen †|| 6

|-

| Tony DiStefano|| 2

| Jeremy Martin|| 6

|-

| Nathan Ramsey || 1

| Chad Reed|| 6

|-

| John Dowd || 1

| Zach Osborne || 6

|-

| Sébastien Tortelli || 1

| R.J. Hampshire †|| 6

|-

| Pierre Karsmakers|| 1

| Damon Bradshaw || 6

|-

| Damon Huffman || 1

| Aaron Plessinger †|| 6

|-

| Greg Albertyn|| 1

| Jeff Emig|| 6

|-

| Michael Craig || 1

| Andrew Short || 5

|-

| Doug Dubach || 1

| Cole Seely|| 5

|-

| Jeff Matiasevich || 1

| Braden Jesseman|| 5

|-

| Rex Staten || 1

| Martin Davalos|| 5

|-

| Chuck Sun || 1

| Jordon Smith|| 5

|-

| Steve Wise || 1

| Levi Kitchen|| 5

|-

| Gaylon Mosier || 1

| Jason Anderson †|| 5

|-

| Jaroslav Falta || 1

| Joey Savatgy †|| 5

|-

| Jim Pomeroy || 1

| Colt Nichols †|| 4

|-

| Rick Ryan || 1

| Justin Cooper †|| 4

|-

| Justin Brayton || 1

| Donny Schmit || 4

|-

| Blake Baggett || 1

| Rich Tichenor || 4

|-

| Cole Seely|| 1

| Jimmy Button|| 4

|-

| Zach Osborne|| 1

| Blake Baggett|| 4

|-

| Andrew Short

|1

| Michael Brown

|4

|-

| Josh Grant

|1

| Brock Sellards

|4

|-

| Malcolm Stewart

|1

| Travis Preston

|4

|-

| Josh Hill

|1

| David Vuillemin

|4

|-

|

|

| Max Anstie

|4

|-

|

|

| Seth Hammaker

|4

|-

|

|

| David Pingree

|4

|-

|

|

| Kyle Lewis

|3

|-

|

|

| Mike LaRocco

|3

|-

|

|

| Buddy Antunez

|3

|-

|

|

| Tallon Vohland

|3

|-

|

|

| Jeremy Buehl

|3

|-

|

|

| Ryan Hughes

|3

|-

|

|

| Austin Stroupe

|3

|-

|

|

| Ryan Sipes

|3

|-

|

|

| Blake Wharton

|3

|-

|

|

| Justin Bogle

|3

|-

|

|

| Malcolm Stewart †

|3

|-

|

|

| Ben Townley

|3

|-

|

|

| Willie Surratt

|3

|-

|

|

| Cameron McAdoo

|3

|-

|

|

| Josh Grant

|3

|-

|

|

| Jason Lawrence

|3

|-

|

|

| Jo Shimoda

|3

|-

|

|

| Ty Davis

|3

|-

|

|

| Todd DeHoop

|3

|-

|

|

| Tom Vialle

|3

|-

|

|

| Eddie Warren

|3

|-

|

|

| Tim Ferry

|2

|-

|

|

| Greg Schnell

|2

|-

|

|

| Wil Hahn

|2

|-

|

|

| Casey Johnson

|2

|-

|

|

| Mike Healey

|2

|-

|

|

| Brock Tickle

|2

|-

|

|

| Shae Bentley

|2

|-

|

|

| Mike Kiedrowski

|2

|-

|

|

| Chad Pederson

|1

|-

|

|

| Pedro Gonzalez

|1

|-

|

|

| Jeff Willoh

|1

|-

|

|

| Michael Craig

|1

|-

|

|

| Casey Lytle

|1

|-

|

|

| Michael Brandes

|1

|-

|

|

| Justin Buckelew

|1

|-

|

|

| Matt Walker

|1

|-

|

|

| Broc Hepler

|1

|-

|

|

| Billy Laninovich

|1

|-

|

|

| Tyler Bowers

|1

|-

|

|

| Jessy Nelson

|1

|-

|

|

| Tyson Vohland

|1

|-

|

|

| Michael Mosiman

|1

|-

|

|

| Jimmy Gaddis

|1

|-

|

|

| Bobby Moore

|1

|-

|

|

| Brian Deegan

|1

|-

|

|

| Garrett Marchbanks †

|1

|-

|

|

| Badder Manneh

|1

|-

|

|

| Todd Campbell

|1

|-

|

|

| Julian Beaumer

|1

|-

|

|

| Phil Lawrence

|1

|-

|

|

| Chance Hymas

|1

|-

|

|

| Pierce Brown

|1

|}

Venues

Sources:

Current Venues

{| class="wikitable sortable"

! Venue !! City !! State/Province !! Period !! Type

|-

|Daytona International Speedway||Daytona Beach||Florida|| 1971–present || Racetrack

|-

|Angel Stadium || Anaheim || California || 1976–1979, 1981–1987, <br /> 1989–1996, 1999–2020, 2022-present || Baseball

|-

|The Dome at America's Center||St. Louis||Missouri|| 1996–2018, 2020, 2022, 2024, 2026-present || Football

|-

|Rice–Eccles Stadium||Salt Lake City||Utah|| 2001–2004, 2009–2013, 2017–2018, 2020–present || Football

|-

|NRG Stadium||Houston||Texas|| 2003–2015, 2018–2019, 2021, 2023, 2026-present || Football

|-

|Lumen Field||Seattle||Washington|| 2005–2014, 2017–2019, 2022-present || Football

|-

|Ford Field||Detroit||Michigan|| 2006–2008, 2014–2017, 2019, 2022-present || Football

|-

|Lucas Oil Stadium||Indianapolis||Indiana|| 2009–2019, 2021–present || Football

|-

|AT&T Stadium || Arlington || Texas || 2010–present || Football

|-

|State Farm Stadium || Glendale || Arizona || 2016–2020, 2022–present || Football

|-

|Empower Field at Mile High||Denver||Colorado|| 2019, 2022–present || Football

|-

|Nissan Stadium||Nashville||Tennessee|| 2019, 2023–2024, 2026-present || Football

|-

|Snapdragon Stadium||San Diego||California|| 2023–present || Football

|-

|Protective Stadium||Birmingham||Alabama|| 2024–present || Football

|-

|Lincoln Financial Field||Philadelphia||Pennsylvania|| 2024–present || Football

|-

|Huntington Bank Field||Cleveland||Ohio|| 2026-present || Football

|}

Former Venues

{| class="wikitable sortable"

! Venue !! City !! State/Province !! Period !! Type

|-

|Acrisure Stadium||Pittsburgh||Pennsylvania|| 2025 || Football

|-

|MetLife Stadium||East Rutherford||New Jersey|| 2014–2017, 2019, 2023, 2025 || Football

|-

|Gillette Stadium||Foxborough||Massachusetts|| 2016, 2018, 2022, 2024-2025 || Football

|-

|Raymond James Stadium||Tampa||Florida|| 1999, 2018, 2020, 2023, 2025 || Football

|-

|Oracle Park||San Francisco||California|| 2003–2010, 2024 || Baseball

|-

|Atlanta Motor Speedway||Hampton||Georgia|| 2021–2023 || Racetrack

|-

|Oakland Coliseum || Oakland || California || 1979–1980, 1984, 2011–2020, 2022-2023 || Baseball

|-

|U.S. Bank Stadium||Minneapolis||Minnesota|| 2017–2019, 2022 || Football

|-

|Petco Park||San Diego||California|| 2015–2020, 2022 || Baseball

|-

|Camping World Stadium||Orlando||Florida|| 1983–1985, 1991–1997, 2005–2007, 2021 || Football

|-

|Mercedes-Benz Stadium||Atlanta||Georgia|| 2018–2020 || Football

|-

|Sam Boyd Stadium||Las Vegas||Nevada|| 1990–1995, 1997–2019 || Football

|-

|Georgia Dome||Atlanta||Georgia|| 1993–2017|| Football

|-

|Rogers Centre||Toronto||Ontario|| 2008–2014, 2016–2017 || Baseball / football

|-

|Levi's Stadium||Santa Clara||California|| 2015–2016 || Football

|-

|Chase Field||Phoenix||Arizona|| 1999–2015 || Baseball

|-

|Qualcomm Stadium||San Diego||California|| 1980–1982, 1985–1987, <br /> 1989–1996, 1998–2014 || Baseball / football

|-

|Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome||Minneapolis||Minnesota|| 1994–2004, 2008, 2013 || Baseball / football

|-

|Mercedes-Benz Superdome||New Orleans||Louisiana|| 1977–1980, 1998–2002, 2009, 2012 || Football

|-

|Dodger Stadium||Los Angeles||California|| 2011–2012 || Baseball

|-

|Jacksonville Municipal Stadium||Jacksonville||Florida|| 2009–2011 || Football

|-

|Texas Stadium||Irving||Texas|| 1975–1977, 1985–1989, 1991–2008 || Football

|-

|RCA Dome||Indianapolis||Indiana|| 1992–2008 || Football

|-

|Pontiac Silverdome||Pontiac||Michigan|| 1976–1984, 1986–2005 || Football

|-

| Astrodome || Houston || Texas || 1974–2002 || Baseball / football

|-

| Route 66 Raceway || Joliet || Illinois || 2000 || Racetrack

|-

| Kingdome||Seattle||Washington|| 1978–1999 || Baseball / football

|-

|Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum||Los Angeles||California|| 1972–1979, 1981–1982, <br /> 1984–1992, 1997–1998 || Football

|-

|Sun Devil Stadium||Phoenix||Arizona|| 1986–1987, 1991, 1997–1998 || Football

|-

|Tampa Stadium||Tampa||Florida|| 1987–1990, 1992–1994, 1996, 1998 || Football

|-

|Charlotte Motor Speedway||Charlotte||North Carolina|| 1996–1998 || Racetrack

|-

|Mile High Stadium||Denver||Colorado|| 1996 || Football

|-

|American Legion Memorial Stadium||Charlotte||North Carolina|| 1990–1995 || Football

|-

| Spartan Stadium || San Jose || California || 1990–1995 || Football

|-

| Cleveland Stadium || Cleveland || Ohio || 1995 || Baseball / football

|-

|Rose Bowl||Pasadena||California|| 1983–1985, 1990, 1993 || Football

|-

|Atlanta–Fulton County Stadium||Atlanta||Georgia|| 1977–1986, 1989–1992 || Baseball / football

|-

|Giants Stadium||East Rutherford||New Jersey|| 1987–1991 || Football

|-

|State Fair Speedway||Oklahoma City||Oklahoma|| 1989–1991 || Racetrack

|-

|Tropicana Field||St. Petersburg||Florida|| 1991 || Baseball / Football

|-

| Cotton Bowl || Dallas || Texas || 1983–1984, 1990 || Football

|-

|Foxboro Stadium||Foxborough||Massachusetts|| 1983–1984, 1990 || Football

|-

|Joe Robbie Stadium||Miami||Florida|| 1989 || Football

|-

|Miami Orange Bowl||Miami||Florida|| 1987 || Football

|-

|Talladega Superspeedway||Talladega||Alabama|| 1984 || Racetrack

|-

|Rich Stadium||Orchard Park||New York|| 1984 || Football

|-

|Cal Expo||Sacramento||California|| 1984 || Racetrack

|-

|Three Rivers Stadium||Pittsburgh||Pennsylvania|| 1978, 1983 || Baseball / football

|-

|Arrowhead Stadium||Kansas City||Missouri|| 1980–1983 || Football

|-

|Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Stadium||Washington, D.C.|| || 1983 || Baseball / football

|-

|John F. Kennedy Stadium||Philadelphia||Pennsylvania|| 1980 || Football

|}

World Supercross Championship winners by year

Conceived in 2003; merged with the AMA series prior to the 2008 season until 2021.

{| class="wikitable"

|-

! Year

! 450 Class

|-

|2022

| Eli Tomac

|-

|2021

| Cooper Webb

|-

|2020

| Eli Tomac

|-

|2019

| Cooper Webb

|-

|2018

| Jason Anderson

|-

|2017

| Ryan Dungey

|-

|2016

| Ryan Dungey

|-

|2015

| Ryan Dungey

|-

|2014

| Ryan Villopoto

|-

|2013

| Ryan Villopoto

|-

|2012

| Ryan Villopoto

|-

|2011

| Ryan Villopoto

|-

|2010

| Ryan Dungey

|-

|2009

| James Stewart Jr.

|-

|2008

| Chad Reed

|-

|2007

| James Stewart Jr.

|-

|2006

| James Stewart Jr.

|-

|2005

| Ricky Carmichael

|-

|2004

| Heath Voss

|-

|2003

| Chad Reed

|}

See also

  • List of Grand Prix motocross world champions
  • List of AMA motocross national champions
  • List of Trans-AMA motocross champions
  • Outline of motorcycles and motorcycling

References

  • AMA Supercross official website of Feld Motorsports
  • AMA Supercross Championship official website