Dodgers confirm they will visit President Trump at White House next month

The Los Angeles Dodgers will indeed visit President Donald Trump at the White House.

The reigning World Series champions announced Tuesday that they will accept the president’s invitation for an event on April 7, when the team will be in D.C. to play the Washington Nationals. The team will visit the Capitol the next day.

The Dodgers set themselves up for a White House visit with their World Series run last year, capped off with a five-game win in the Fall Classic over the New York Yankees, Trump’s preferred MLB team. There had, however, been some question about whether the Dodgers would make the trip to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, especially given the timing.

Before Tuesday, there had been no indication of the team’s plans, despite April 7 being only two weeks away. By comparison, the Philadelphia Eagles, a team that did not visit Trump during his first presidency amid contentious circumstances, won their second Super Bowl on Feb. 9 and confirmed they were visiting the White House on March 11.

In that time, Trump has feuded with local politicians and threatened to withhold federal aid for the wildfires that ravaged part of Los Angeles in January. His administration has also drawn heavy criticism over the deletion of an article about Jackie Robinson’s Army history, which was later restored, as part of its campaign against DEI policies.

While the Dodgers say they will visit the White House, it’s possible that not every player will make the trip. Dodgers star Mookie Betts skipped a visit to Trump’s White House after winning the World Series with the Boston Red Sox, and manager Dave Roberts said he wouldn’t go when asked hypothetically in 2019. Trump has also been critical of Roberts’ decision-making in the past.

The Dodgers announced they would make the trip minutes before Roberts spoke with reporters Tuesday ahead of a spring training game against the Los Angeles Angels. Roberts confirmed that he will indeed make the trip, via Jack Harris of the Los Angeles Times:

“I respect the position. It’s the highest office in our country certainly, in the world. So I’m looking forward to it.”

Roberts also addressed the matter of the Robinson article, saying that he’s happy it was restored and hinting at stronger opinions about the matter:

“I’m happy they put the page back up. I have my strong opinions on DEI and all that stuff, but that’s another scrum.”

Per Open Secrets, both Dodgers principal owner Mark Walter and team president Stan Kasten have made donations to Democratic causes in the past, while Magic Johnson and Billie Jean King, both members of the Dodgers’ ownership group, have publicly voiced opposition to Trump.

The Dodgers won the 2020 World Series on Oct. 27, 2020, one week before Trump’s loss to Joe Biden in the presidential election, and the team visited Biden in the White House the following July. They also accepted a call from Biden and vice president Kamala Harris shortly after their World Series victory last fall.

USDA Delivers on Rural Energy Commitments, Provides Path for Applicants to Support U.S. Energy Independence

(Washington, D.C., March 25, 2025) — U.S. Secretary of Agriculture Brooke Rollins announced today that the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) will release previously obligated funding under the Rural Energy For America Program (REAP), Empowering Rural America (New ERA) and Powering Affordable Clean Energy (PACE) programs. This announcement underscores the Trump Administration’s commitment to rural communities — including the farmers, ranchers, and small businesses at their core — and their essential role in building a stronger, more energy secure America. 

Gary Cohen stops by the show, and a full 2025 Mets season preview | The Mets Pod

Connor Rogers and Joe DeMayo drop a supersized 2025 season preview episode of The Mets Pod presented by Tri-State Cadillac, as special guest Gary Cohen stops by the show!

The guys chat with SNY’s Mets play-by-play broadcaster about Juan Soto, Pete Alonso, the situation at second base, the state of the starting rotation, high expectations for the team, and what he’s looking forward to most in what will be the 20th year of Mets baseball on SNY!

Later, Connor and Joe take the temperature of the starting rotation, bullpen, lineup, and defense of the Mets heading into the regular season, drop their 2025 season predictions that always will be fun to review in the future, and answer Mailbag questions about prospects, Brett Baty, Luisangel Acuña, future live shows, and the health of Brandon Nimmo.

Be sure to subscribe to The Mets Pod at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts.

The Entire Pixel 9 Lineup Is Discounted During Amazon’s Big Spring Sale

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Whether you’re after long-term support, phenomenal cameras, or just an all-around great phone, the Google Pixel 9 lineup has a lot to offer. And with the Amazon Spring Sale on, you can snag any of the three phones in that lineup at a considerable discount. Whether it’s the top-of-the-line Pixel 9 Pro XL or the more modest Pixel 9, you’ll get well over $100 off. Here are the three devices you can choose from:

The Pixel 9 sets a strong baseline for the Pixel lineup. It has a simple but elegant design that’s compact and budget-friendly. The display is excellent, offering a sharp resolution, incredible brightness, and smooth visuals. Around back it features a pair of high-resolution cameras offering wide and ultra-wide focal lengths. And Google tops it off with a modest chipset that powers some impressive AI features and that will get long-term software support for even more value.

The Pixel 9 Pro takes everything the Pixel 9 sets up and raises it a notch. It gets an even sharper and brighter display. And its camera system steps it up with an upgraded selfie shooter and a 5x telephoto sensor on that back that makes a huge difference when you want to zoom in on a subject or get some nice bokeh blur. And for those of you who don’t love the industry’s shift toward increasingly large phones, you’ll love to hear that the Pixel 9 Pro is the same size as the Pixel 9. 

For those who love extra screen space, the Pixel 9 Pro XL brings it. You get all the upgrades of the Pixel 9 Pro but tucked into a bigger phone. This model sports a 6.8-inch display and bumps up to a 5,060mAh battery to help out with longevity. 

All three models come with some future-ready tech including Wi-Fi 7, eSIM support, and satellite communication. They’re also built nice and sturdy with aluminum frames, tough Gorilla Glass Victus 2, and IP68-rated protection against dust and dunk in water.

Shopping for tech? Lifehacker can help you make the right decision. Browse our tech reviews and head-to-head comparisons for everything from laptops and smartwatches to e-bikes and home gyms. Subscribe to our deals newsletter, Add to Cart, for the best sales sent to your inbox, or browse our best-of lists directly on Amazon, including:

Top 50 people who will impact the 2025 MLB season: Nos. 50-26

This is a list not of the 50 best players in MLB — Buster Posey is no longer one of the best hitters in our sport — but, rather, of the top 50 people set to influence the 2025 MLB season. Think of these individuals as the predominant characters in your favorite TV show, with the season premiere airing on Thursday.

On this list are All-Stars, prospects and some players you’ve maybe never heard of, as well as owners, managers, front-office execs and four guys named Jackson (that’s one more than last year).

The hope is that this list helps you sort out what to know and whom to care about as the 2025 MLB season begins. (Stay tuned for the top half of the list on Wednesday.)

[Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Baseball league for the 2025 MLB season]

Meet the fastest man in baseball. Simpson is a burner, a comet, a cheetah on rocket fuel, Usain Bolt in baseball pants. Across 110 minor-league games last year, the fleet-footed Atlantan nabbed 104 bases. His .355 batting average was buoyed by that outrageous speed, which allowed him to turn infield nubbers and routine grounders into base hits. Simply by existing, Simpson puts immense pressure on pitchers, infielders, catchers and slow people who hate themselves.

And while he’s relatively new to center field, his speed will also lead to some eye-popping catches.

Simpson does not have an over-the-fence homer as a pro, and he had just one in three college seasons, but he has elite bat-to-ball skills. The 24-year-old ran a 93% contact rate last year — Luis Arraez and Steven Kwan were the only qualified big leaguers above 90 — which lets his wheels do the talking.

Simpson will start the year in Triple-A, but at some point this season, this dude is going to show up and conjure a run of jaw-dropping, viral baserunning moments. All those tall tales about Cool Papa Bell? How he’d flip the switch and jump into bed before the lights went out? About Chandler Simpson, it’s all true.

Neither of these guys can claim rookie status anymore, but effectively, they’re still unproven newbies, baby deer with enormous potential, slumbering superstars waiting to explode.

Wood, 6-foot-7 with spindly limbs, is built like an NBA wing. He debuted last July, and in 336 plate appearances, he showcased a phenomenal understanding of the strike zone; posting a 96th-percentile chase rate is a preposterous accomplishment for a rookie. But that selectiveness often led to passiveness. And considering that Wood has huge juice, the Nats want him to be more aggressive when he gets something to drive.

Caminero is a very different player. He’s like a thicker version of young Javy Baez, but without the defensive wizardry. Still, we’re talking about generational bat speed here, bat speed that lets Caminero do things other players can’t.

Simply put: If Wood and Caminero play at an All-Star level, there’s a good chance their teams are in the playoff hunt. More notably for casual fans, the best versions of Wood and Caminero are highlight-reel heroes capable of jaw-dropping baseball moments.

The Mets spent a small fortune on Juan Soto, but the rest of their roster, as evidenced by a $332 million payroll, isn’t exactly bargain-bin fodder. New York should have a fantastic lineup, helmed by Soto, Francisco Lindor and Pete Alonso. The pitching, however, is far from a sure thing. The Mets’ rotation, which seemed light entering spring training, is now without Sean Manaea and Frankie Montas, both of whom suffered injuries early in camp.

Enter Holmes, who spent most of the past three seasons closing games for the Yankees.

The Mets saw something in the 32-year-old sinkerballer, signing him to a three-year deal with the intention of converting him to a starter. Early returns have been stellar. Holmes looked sensational in spring training, even earning the nod to start on Opening Day. Whether he can sustain this success into the season as his workload grows remains to be seen, but he is suddenly a very important person for a Mets team with very large dreams.

An aside: Imagine telling Yankees fans last summer that Clay Holmes would be starting on Opening Day for the Mets and that Mets fans would be stoked about it. Time moves fast.

The nomadic A’s enter Year One in West Sacramento as something of a cheeky playoff dark horse. That’s because after leaving Oakland in the lurch, the Athletics spent some real money this winter. A good chunk of that ($65.5 million over three years) went to Butler, who had a breakout second half in 2024, including the league’s 10th-highest wRC+ after the All-Star break.

That was enough to convince this organization to give the 24-year-old slugger an extension, essentially making him the face of the post-Oakland A’s alongside fellow extended slugger Brent Rooker. But Butler is much younger than Rooker and has a much, much higher ceiling. Whether the 2025 A’s are a weird novelty or an actually good ballclub likely depends on whether Butler can continue delivering down-ballot-MVP-level production.

The 2024 Diamondbacks, who spent October on the couch, were a superior team to the 2023 Diamondbacks, who were three wins away from a world championship. Such is the wonkiness of ball; it’s better to be lucky than good, better to be random than specific.

But that bizarro-world tiebreaker — ensured by a Mets-Braves doubleheader split in the final games of the season — wasn’t the only thing that kept the 89-win Snakes out of the playoffs. Corbin Carroll, hailed as a potential MVP candidate, was catastrophically bad for four months before finally catching fire in August. 

Also, Arizona’s pitching staff had the fourth-worst team ERA in baseball before adding a new ace in a winter surprise. That makes these Corbins — two of the only three MLBers ever with that first name (shout-out Corbin Martin, who was also a D-back) — absolutely crucial characters.

Sternberg took over control of the organization in November 2005. Since Opening Day 2008, only the big-spending Yankees and Dodgers have compiled more regular-season wins than his low-budget operation. On the field, Sternberg’s tenure has been a rousing success.

Beyond the diamond, however, things have been much stickier.

Tampa’s stadium situation was complex before a hurricane blew the roof off Tropicana Field, forcing the Rays to play this season at the Yankees’ spring training park across the bay. The damage to the Trop also led to the disintegration of a stadium deal between the team and Pinellas County. Now the organization is back at square one, with its home dilapidated and its future uncertain.

All this chaos is beginning to chip away at Sternberg’s reputation. Earlier this month, The Athletic reported that a number of owners and league officials wish to pressure Sternberg into selling the Rays. How Sternberg responds and whether he can gain some clarity on his team’s stadium situation could have enormous repercussions for the entire sport. Commissioner Rob Manfred has said multiple times that he doesn’t anticipate MLB expanding to 32 teams until the Rays and A’s stadium situations are rectified. The ball appears to be in Sternberg’s court — or, rather, dome.

In 2022, a 22-year-old Murakami clobbered 56 homers, breaking the single-season NPB record for a Japanese-born player and putting him on the radar of MLB scouts. His offensive numbers have tailed off slightly since his massive output that year, but the 6-foot-2, 250-pound slugger is still one of the best hitters in Japan.

An extension he signed after 2022 includes a stipulation that the Swallows make him available to MLB teams after the 2025 season. If Murakami cranks 50 homers, expect the thick third baseman to be a major storyline next winter.

Time, like a coddled child, cannot lose. In fact, it has never once lost. Every ballplayer, from the Hall of Famers to the weekend warriors, must one day hang ‘em up. The raging against that inevitability is equally heroic and tragic because the end is inevitable.

One day, Scherzer and Verlander will enter the Hall of Fame. They might even do so alongside each other as the old-school aces of a bygone era of pitching. But now, in the twilight of their careers, entering their age-40 and 42 seasons, respectively, Scherzer and Verlander are hoping to keep the light burning for at least another season.

Both find themselves in new uniforms, surrounded by the unfamiliar. Their world-beating powers — velocity, flexibility, durability — have faded with age. Can Scherzer and Verlander turn the clock back one more time? Can they be competent contributors for clubs on the fringes of the playoff picture? Will strong first halves warrant deadline moves to real contenders? Or has Father Time arrived in earnest?

This kind of thing happens a lot in European soccer: Franchise icon returns to beloved club as manager or back-room string-puller in an attempt to guide said club back to glory.

But in the modern era of MLB, a move such as the one San Francisco pulled with Posey is pretty unprecedented. Considering his dearth of experience in an MLB front office, it was a surprise that Posey was named Giants POBO in September. Publicly, the future Hall of Fame catcher has championed a “new culture,” which is the same empty nothing-speak as when a politician uses the word “values.” It seems, given the analytical nature of the previous Giants regime, that Posey is going to zag a bit and adopt what might be seen as a more old-school approach. Most of his hires thus far have been related to the golden era of Giants baseball, of which Posey was a part.

What Buster Posey, the executive, looks like is mostly a mystery. A full season will provide a glimpse into how the 37-year-old plans to run things from his front-office perch.

Can Mike Trout, right fielder, stay healthy through the 2025 season? (Stefan Milic/Yahoo Sports)
Stefan Milic/Yahoo Sports

The Millville Meteor has averaged just 67 ball games a season since 2021. Injuries have, thus far, robbed Trout of his 30s and robbed the viewing public of witnessing his generational excellence. This spring, for the first time, we saw a meaningful change in strategy for the thick-necked New Jerseyan. After a decade in center field, Trout has moved to right, hoping the new position will take less of a toll on his body.

Amid all the knocks, ailments and time on the shelf, Trout has continued to produce in his limited windows of health. No matter what happens to baseball’s favorite weatherman this season, it’s a big deal. If Trout stays healthy, it’s a delightful surprise. If he gets hurt, that’s a story, too, albeit a much sadder one. And if he misses another big chunk of time in 2025, it might finally be time to say goodbye to the god we once knew.

The expectations have been heightened. New York’s heroic NLCS run last year was a joyous thrill ride, but it also established a new standard in Queens. This new era of Mets baseball, one made possible by the financial might of owner Steve Cohen, is both invigorating and intimidating. The bigger the dreams, the more it hurts when they don’t come true.

Whether the Mets can live up to the hype depends a lot on Lindor and Alonso, who will anchor a lineup that added Juan Soto over the winter. Lindor, who was in consideration for an official team captaincy during the offseason, just finished second in the NL MVP race and delivered an all-time memorable franchise moment with his NLDS grand slam against the Phillies. Alonso tested the free-agent waters before returning to the Mets on a short-term deal.

If the Mets are good, this tandem will deserve the glory that comes with it. But if the Mets are bad, some of the blame will likely fall on Lindor and Alonso.

The Chicago Cubs haven’t won a playoff game since 2017. That’s the fourth-longest streak in baseball, behind only the Orioles, Pirates and Angels.

It’s a drought that puts Hoyer, whose contract expires at season’s end, firmly in the hot seat. And based on his behavior this winter, Hoyer might be feeling some of that heat. Trading for one year of Kyle Tucker was a big swing, one that could ultimately look quite foolish if top prospect Cam Smith, who has looked sensational in spring training, turns into a force for the Astros.

After taking over for Theo Epstein in November 2020, Hoyer oversaw the painful teardown of Chicago’s beloved 2016 World Series club. Away went Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant and Javier Báez for a gaggle of prospects and the idea of a hopeful future. That rebuild, despite Chicago’s decent 2024 and Hoyer’s best efforts, has yet to bear fruit. Another October vacation on the North Side might necessitate an overhaul at Wrigley. A playoff run, on the other hand, would likely silence the doubters and secure Hoyer’s future in Chicago.

It’s probably a good thing that this list isn’t longer. Only two teams, the Marlins and White Sox, enter this season in full rebuild mode. The Cardinals, the only team to not sign an MLB free agent this winter, could embark upon a mini-deadline teardown if the first half is a struggle. That makes this trio the likeliest notable names to be dealt during the season.

That Arenado, who publicly asked for a trade out of St. Louis in December, is still on the Cardinals qualifies as a huge surprise. Robert has been the subject of trade speculation for a while now, but his injury track record understandably gives some teams pause. If he has a healthy few months, the rebuilding White Sox would flip him for prospects in a flash.

Alcantara is potentially even more of a mystery box, as the 2022 NL Cy Young winner missed all of last season recovering from Tommy John surgery. He is under contract with Miami on an extremely team-friendly deal through the 2027 season, which will surely make him a hot commodity come deadline time. The best version of Alcantara is a legitimate ace, but it’s highly unlikely he’s long for South Florida, considering how aggressive this Marlins front office has been in trading its best pieces for prospects.

In 2019, ESPN’s Jeff Passan wrote a feature on Domínguez, then a historically heralded, 16-year-old amateur prospect who’d recently signed with the Yankees. In that article, an anonymous general manager said of Domínguez, “he’s like [Mike] Trout. And Trout wasn’t close to this good when he was 16.”

That preposterous comparison, predictably, helped spark a runaway hype train, one that maintained steam as Domínguez, nicknamed “The Martian,” matriculated up the minor-league ladder and arrived in the bigs well before his 21st birthday. Injuries and defensive kerfuffles precluded a full breakout, but now it’s go-time for the Dominican bowling ball, who will start the season as New York’s every-day left fielder.

The Yankees are hoping his … adventures … in the outfield are a thing of the past. It’s a reasonable assumption; Domínguez’s natural athleticism and experience in center should eventually translate to his new digs in left. There’s little doubt that Domínguez, built like an SEC fullback, will hit for power, but whether this dude is an All-Star or a solid role player depends on the rest of his offensive game.

Holliday, Chourio and Merrill all appeared on this list last year as 20-year-old rookies. Then the trio of Jacksons had very different debut seasons. Holliday stunk up the farm. Chourio treaded water until July, then went on an absolute tear down the stretch. Merrill was a stud from the jump and finished second behind Paul Skenes in NL Rookie of the Year voting. All three appeared in the playoffs.

They are joined for the 2025 season by a new Jackson, one who throws, rather than hits, a baseball for a living. Jobe, one of the sport’s top starting pitching prospects, debuted last September out of the Tigers bullpen. The hard-throwing 22-year-old will begin the season as Detroit’s No. 5 starter and has the talent to become event television.

That’s also what Holliday, who looked overwhelmed and overmatched in 2024, hopes to become. Part of a stacked Baltimore lineup, he’ll be less relied upon than Chourio and Merrill, whose teams are depending on big production from their youngsters.

Let’s review the Tatis timeline.

2021: Ascends to full-blown superstardom as a charismatic tornado of baseball talent. Cranks 42 homers and finishes third in NL MVP voting as a 22-year-old shortstop.

2022: Fractures his wrist in an offseason motorcycle crash. Then, while rehabbing in the minor leagues, tests positive for a PED and receives an 80-game suspension.

2023: Returns in April playing right field. Performs magnificently in his new defensive home but shows some rust with the bat as a star-studded Padres team misses the playoffs.

2024: Is limited to 102 games because of a quad issue but still takes a significant step forward with the bat, improving his OPS by 63 points.

Now what? Since getting popped for PEDs, Tatis has said and done all the right things. While the Padres have remained a spice cabinet, Tatis has generally avoided controversy. All the while, he has produced on the field, albeit somewhat below his peak. But can he be a superstar again?

After 2021, Tatis was being hailed as the face of the sport, the future of baseball, an immensely popular force with crossover potential. His jersey was the second-most popular of the 2021 season, behind only Mookie Betts. Then, by his own doing, it all came crashing down.

If Tatis delivers MVP production in 2025, can the 26-year-old rejoin MLB’s constellation of stars? Does he deserve to? Does that paradigm-shifting player still exist? And can he keep this era of Padres baseball rolling as the club’s margins and margin for error grow ever smaller?

Top 50 people who will impact the 2025 MLB season: Nos. 50-26

This is a list not of the 50 best players in MLB — Buster Posey is no longer one of the best hitters in our sport — but, rather, of the top 50 people set to influence the 2025 MLB season. Think of these individuals as the predominant characters in your favorite TV show, with the season premiere airing on Thursday.

On this list are All-Stars, prospects and some players you’ve maybe never heard of, as well as owners, managers, front-office execs and four guys named Jackson (that’s one more than last year).

The hope is that this list helps you sort out what to know and whom to care about as the 2025 MLB season begins. (Stay tuned for the top half of the list on Wednesday.)

[Join or create a Yahoo Fantasy Baseball league for the 2025 MLB season]

Meet the fastest man in baseball. Simpson is a burner, a comet, a cheetah on rocket fuel, Usain Bolt in baseball pants. Across 110 minor-league games last year, the fleet-footed Atlantan nabbed 104 bases. His .355 batting average was buoyed by that outrageous speed, which allowed him to turn infield nubbers and routine grounders into base hits. Simply by existing, Simpson puts immense pressure on pitchers, infielders, catchers and slow people who hate themselves.

And while he’s relatively new to center field, his speed will also lead to some eye-popping catches.

Simpson does not have an over-the-fence homer as a pro, and he had just one in three college seasons, but he has elite bat-to-ball skills. The 24-year-old ran a 93% contact rate last year — Luis Arraez and Steven Kwan were the only qualified big leaguers above 90 — which lets his wheels do the talking.

Simpson will start the year in Triple-A, but at some point this season, this dude is going to show up and conjure a run of jaw-dropping, viral baserunning moments. All those tall tales about Cool Papa Bell? How he’d flip the switch and jump into bed before the lights went out? About Chandler Simpson, it’s all true.

Neither of these guys can claim rookie status anymore, but effectively, they’re still unproven newbies, baby deer with enormous potential, slumbering superstars waiting to explode.

Wood, 6-foot-7 with spindly limbs, is built like an NBA wing. He debuted last July, and in 336 plate appearances, he showcased a phenomenal understanding of the strike zone; posting a 96th-percentile chase rate is a preposterous accomplishment for a rookie. But that selectiveness often led to passiveness. And considering that Wood has huge juice, the Nats want him to be more aggressive when he gets something to drive.

Caminero is a very different player. He’s like a thicker version of young Javy Baez, but without the defensive wizardry. Still, we’re talking about generational bat speed here, bat speed that lets Caminero do things other players can’t.

Simply put: If Wood and Caminero play at an All-Star level, there’s a good chance their teams are in the playoff hunt. More notably for casual fans, the best versions of Wood and Caminero are highlight-reel heroes capable of jaw-dropping baseball moments.

The Mets spent a small fortune on Juan Soto, but the rest of their roster, as evidenced by a $332 million payroll, isn’t exactly bargain-bin fodder. New York should have a fantastic lineup, helmed by Soto, Francisco Lindor and Pete Alonso. The pitching, however, is far from a sure thing. The Mets’ rotation, which seemed light entering spring training, is now without Sean Manaea and Frankie Montas, both of whom suffered injuries early in camp.

Enter Holmes, who spent most of the past three seasons closing games for the Yankees.

The Mets saw something in the 32-year-old sinkerballer, signing him to a three-year deal with the intention of converting him to a starter. Early returns have been stellar. Holmes looked sensational in spring training, even earning the nod to start on Opening Day. Whether he can sustain this success into the season as his workload grows remains to be seen, but he is suddenly a very important person for a Mets team with very large dreams.

An aside: Imagine telling Yankees fans last summer that Clay Holmes would be starting on Opening Day for the Mets and that Mets fans would be stoked about it. Time moves fast.

The nomadic A’s enter Year One in West Sacramento as something of a cheeky playoff dark horse. That’s because after leaving Oakland in the lurch, the Athletics spent some real money this winter. A good chunk of that ($65.5 million over three years) went to Butler, who had a breakout second half in 2024, including the league’s 10th-highest wRC+ after the All-Star break.

That was enough to convince this organization to give the 24-year-old slugger an extension, essentially making him the face of the post-Oakland A’s alongside fellow extended slugger Brent Rooker. But Butler is much younger than Rooker and has a much, much higher ceiling. Whether the 2025 A’s are a weird novelty or an actually good ballclub likely depends on whether Butler can continue delivering down-ballot-MVP-level production.

The 2024 Diamondbacks, who spent October on the couch, were a superior team to the 2023 Diamondbacks, who were three wins away from a world championship. Such is the wonkiness of ball; it’s better to be lucky than good, better to be random than specific.

But that bizarro-world tiebreaker — ensured by a Mets-Braves doubleheader split in the final games of the season — wasn’t the only thing that kept the 89-win Snakes out of the playoffs. Corbin Carroll, hailed as a potential MVP candidate, was catastrophically bad for four months before finally catching fire in August. 

Also, Arizona’s pitching staff had the fourth-worst team ERA in baseball before adding a new ace in a winter surprise. That makes these Corbins — two of the only three MLBers ever with that first name (shout-out Corbin Martin, who was also a D-back) — absolutely crucial characters.

Sternberg took over control of the organization in November 2005. Since Opening Day 2008, only the big-spending Yankees and Dodgers have compiled more regular-season wins than his low-budget operation. On the field, Sternberg’s tenure has been a rousing success.

Beyond the diamond, however, things have been much stickier.

Tampa’s stadium situation was complex before a hurricane blew the roof off Tropicana Field, forcing the Rays to play this season at the Yankees’ spring training park across the bay. The damage to the Trop also led to the disintegration of a stadium deal between the team and Pinellas County. Now the organization is back at square one, with its home dilapidated and its future uncertain.

All this chaos is beginning to chip away at Sternberg’s reputation. Earlier this month, The Athletic reported that a number of owners and league officials wish to pressure Sternberg into selling the Rays. How Sternberg responds and whether he can gain some clarity on his team’s stadium situation could have enormous repercussions for the entire sport. Commissioner Rob Manfred has said multiple times that he doesn’t anticipate MLB expanding to 32 teams until the Rays and A’s stadium situations are rectified. The ball appears to be in Sternberg’s court — or, rather, dome.

In 2022, a 22-year-old Murakami clobbered 56 homers, breaking the single-season NPB record for a Japanese-born player and putting him on the radar of MLB scouts. His offensive numbers have tailed off slightly since his massive output that year, but the 6-foot-2, 250-pound slugger is still one of the best hitters in Japan.

An extension he signed after 2022 includes a stipulation that the Swallows make him available to MLB teams after the 2025 season. If Murakami cranks 50 homers, expect the thick third baseman to be a major storyline next winter.

Time, like a coddled child, cannot lose. In fact, it has never once lost. Every ballplayer, from the Hall of Famers to the weekend warriors, must one day hang ‘em up. The raging against that inevitability is equally heroic and tragic because the end is inevitable.

One day, Scherzer and Verlander will enter the Hall of Fame. They might even do so alongside each other as the old-school aces of a bygone era of pitching. But now, in the twilight of their careers, entering their age-40 and 42 seasons, respectively, Scherzer and Verlander are hoping to keep the light burning for at least another season.

Both find themselves in new uniforms, surrounded by the unfamiliar. Their world-beating powers — velocity, flexibility, durability — have faded with age. Can Scherzer and Verlander turn the clock back one more time? Can they be competent contributors for clubs on the fringes of the playoff picture? Will strong first halves warrant deadline moves to real contenders? Or has Father Time arrived in earnest?

This kind of thing happens a lot in European soccer: Franchise icon returns to beloved club as manager or back-room string-puller in an attempt to guide said club back to glory.

But in the modern era of MLB, a move such as the one San Francisco pulled with Posey is pretty unprecedented. Considering his dearth of experience in an MLB front office, it was a surprise that Posey was named Giants POBO in September. Publicly, the future Hall of Fame catcher has championed a “new culture,” which is the same empty nothing-speak as when a politician uses the word “values.” It seems, given the analytical nature of the previous Giants regime, that Posey is going to zag a bit and adopt what might be seen as a more old-school approach. Most of his hires thus far have been related to the golden era of Giants baseball, of which Posey was a part.

What Buster Posey, the executive, looks like is mostly a mystery. A full season will provide a glimpse into how the 37-year-old plans to run things from his front-office perch.

Can Mike Trout, right fielder, stay healthy through the 2025 season? (Stefan Milic/Yahoo Sports)
Stefan Milic/Yahoo Sports

The Millville Meteor has averaged just 67 ball games a season since 2021. Injuries have, thus far, robbed Trout of his 30s and robbed the viewing public of witnessing his generational excellence. This spring, for the first time, we saw a meaningful change in strategy for the thick-necked New Jerseyan. After a decade in center field, Trout has moved to right, hoping the new position will take less of a toll on his body.

Amid all the knocks, ailments and time on the shelf, Trout has continued to produce in his limited windows of health. No matter what happens to baseball’s favorite weatherman this season, it’s a big deal. If Trout stays healthy, it’s a delightful surprise. If he gets hurt, that’s a story, too, albeit a much sadder one. And if he misses another big chunk of time in 2025, it might finally be time to say goodbye to the god we once knew.

The expectations have been heightened. New York’s heroic NLCS run last year was a joyous thrill ride, but it also established a new standard in Queens. This new era of Mets baseball, one made possible by the financial might of owner Steve Cohen, is both invigorating and intimidating. The bigger the dreams, the more it hurts when they don’t come true.

Whether the Mets can live up to the hype depends a lot on Lindor and Alonso, who will anchor a lineup that added Juan Soto over the winter. Lindor, who was in consideration for an official team captaincy during the offseason, just finished second in the NL MVP race and delivered an all-time memorable franchise moment with his NLDS grand slam against the Phillies. Alonso tested the free-agent waters before returning to the Mets on a short-term deal.

If the Mets are good, this tandem will deserve the glory that comes with it. But if the Mets are bad, some of the blame will likely fall on Lindor and Alonso.

The Chicago Cubs haven’t won a playoff game since 2017. That’s the fourth-longest streak in baseball, behind only the Orioles, Pirates and Angels.

It’s a drought that puts Hoyer, whose contract expires at season’s end, firmly in the hot seat. And based on his behavior this winter, Hoyer might be feeling some of that heat. Trading for one year of Kyle Tucker was a big swing, one that could ultimately look quite foolish if top prospect Cam Smith, who has looked sensational in spring training, turns into a force for the Astros.

After taking over for Theo Epstein in November 2020, Hoyer oversaw the painful teardown of Chicago’s beloved 2016 World Series club. Away went Anthony Rizzo, Kris Bryant and Javier Báez for a gaggle of prospects and the idea of a hopeful future. That rebuild, despite Chicago’s decent 2024 and Hoyer’s best efforts, has yet to bear fruit. Another October vacation on the North Side might necessitate an overhaul at Wrigley. A playoff run, on the other hand, would likely silence the doubters and secure Hoyer’s future in Chicago.

It’s probably a good thing that this list isn’t longer. Only two teams, the Marlins and White Sox, enter this season in full rebuild mode. The Cardinals, the only team to not sign an MLB free agent this winter, could embark upon a mini-deadline teardown if the first half is a struggle. That makes this trio the likeliest notable names to be dealt during the season.

That Arenado, who publicly asked for a trade out of St. Louis in December, is still on the Cardinals qualifies as a huge surprise. Robert has been the subject of trade speculation for a while now, but his injury track record understandably gives some teams pause. If he has a healthy few months, the rebuilding White Sox would flip him for prospects in a flash.

Alcantara is potentially even more of a mystery box, as the 2022 NL Cy Young winner missed all of last season recovering from Tommy John surgery. He is under contract with Miami on an extremely team-friendly deal through the 2027 season, which will surely make him a hot commodity come deadline time. The best version of Alcantara is a legitimate ace, but it’s highly unlikely he’s long for South Florida, considering how aggressive this Marlins front office has been in trading its best pieces for prospects.

In 2019, ESPN’s Jeff Passan wrote a feature on Domínguez, then a historically heralded, 16-year-old amateur prospect who’d recently signed with the Yankees. In that article, an anonymous general manager said of Domínguez, “he’s like [Mike] Trout. And Trout wasn’t close to this good when he was 16.”

That preposterous comparison, predictably, helped spark a runaway hype train, one that maintained steam as Domínguez, nicknamed “The Martian,” matriculated up the minor-league ladder and arrived in the bigs well before his 21st birthday. Injuries and defensive kerfuffles precluded a full breakout, but now it’s go-time for the Dominican bowling ball, who will start the season as New York’s every-day left fielder.

The Yankees are hoping his … adventures … in the outfield are a thing of the past. It’s a reasonable assumption; Domínguez’s natural athleticism and experience in center should eventually translate to his new digs in left. There’s little doubt that Domínguez, built like an SEC fullback, will hit for power, but whether this dude is an All-Star or a solid role player depends on the rest of his offensive game.

Holliday, Chourio and Merrill all appeared on this list last year as 20-year-old rookies. Then the trio of Jacksons had very different debut seasons. Holliday stunk up the farm. Chourio treaded water until July, then went on an absolute tear down the stretch. Merrill was a stud from the jump and finished second behind Paul Skenes in NL Rookie of the Year voting. All three appeared in the playoffs.

They are joined for the 2025 season by a new Jackson, one who throws, rather than hits, a baseball for a living. Jobe, one of the sport’s top starting pitching prospects, debuted last September out of the Tigers bullpen. The hard-throwing 22-year-old will begin the season as Detroit’s No. 5 starter and has the talent to become event television.

That’s also what Holliday, who looked overwhelmed and overmatched in 2024, hopes to become. Part of a stacked Baltimore lineup, he’ll be less relied upon than Chourio and Merrill, whose teams are depending on big production from their youngsters.

Let’s review the Tatis timeline.

2021: Ascends to full-blown superstardom as a charismatic tornado of baseball talent. Cranks 42 homers and finishes third in NL MVP voting as a 22-year-old shortstop.

2022: Fractures his wrist in an offseason motorcycle crash. Then, while rehabbing in the minor leagues, tests positive for a PED and receives an 80-game suspension.

2023: Returns in April playing right field. Performs magnificently in his new defensive home but shows some rust with the bat as a star-studded Padres team misses the playoffs.

2024: Is limited to 102 games because of a quad issue but still takes a significant step forward with the bat, improving his OPS by 63 points.

Now what? Since getting popped for PEDs, Tatis has said and done all the right things. While the Padres have remained a spice cabinet, Tatis has generally avoided controversy. All the while, he has produced on the field, albeit somewhat below his peak. But can he be a superstar again?

After 2021, Tatis was being hailed as the face of the sport, the future of baseball, an immensely popular force with crossover potential. His jersey was the second-most popular of the 2021 season, behind only Mookie Betts. Then, by his own doing, it all came crashing down.

If Tatis delivers MVP production in 2025, can the 26-year-old rejoin MLB’s constellation of stars? Does he deserve to? Does that paradigm-shifting player still exist? And can he keep this era of Padres baseball rolling as the club’s margins and margin for error grow ever smaller?

The Best Deals on Fitness Trackers and Smartwatches During Amazon’s Big Spring Sale

We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.

Amazon’s Big Spring Sale is on now, a mini version of Prime Day that has inspired competing sales at Target and Walmart. Plenty of fitness trackers and smartwatches are among the discounted items. Here are my picks for the best deals, including watches from Apple, Garmin, Fitbit, and Samsung.

Apple Watches

The Apple Watch SE, the most budget version of this smartwatch, is available starting at $169 today. (As with all Apple Watches, the price goes up if you want a larger size or if you buy the version with cellular connectivity.) That’s 32% off the original price of $249.

The Apple Watch Series 10, the one we crowned the best Apple Watch for most people, is available for $299 and up today, down from $399 regular price. Again, that’s the smaller, non-cellular version, with upgrades adding a bit—but all sizes and types are on sale.

Garmin fitness watches

Garmin’s Forerunner 55 is still on that sale from a few days ago, when our Lifehacker’s deals writer Daniel Oropeza flagged it as his favorite deal of the day. It’s $149, a great price for a running watch that does all the basics. It will track your pace, location, heart rate, sleep, and more. It has a retro feel, with its MIP screen and button navigation instead of a touchscreen. But you really can’t beat the price. 

Two other older-generation Forerunner watches are also on sale today, and since they both end in -55, you know they have that same MIP screen, which is reflective in sunlight and needs a backlight in the dark to light them up. (Many runners prefer MIP to the more smartwatch-style AMOLED screens, so who am I to judge?) 

Aside from the screen, the Forerunner 255, a steal at $229 today, and it is almost identical to my favorite running watch, the Forerunner 265. (The only other major feature it’s missing? Music storage, but you can get a Forerunner 255 Music for just $20 more.) That said, the Forerunner 265 is also on sale today, for $399, which is $50 off its usual price. 

Garmin’s Forerunner 955 is the big brother to the 255, with onboard maps that make it great for hiking and trail running. It’s just $349, down from an original price of $499 when it was released in 2022. And if you’d like to go for the solar version, to top up your battery when you’re out in the sun, the Forerunner 955 Solar is $399 today.

If you want something a little less sport-specific, Garmin’s Vivoactive 5 is $217 today, down from a regular price of $299. This is the lifestyle smartwatch that beat out the Pixel Watch 3 in my head-to-head comparison. If you’re looking for a fresh alternative to Fitbit smartwatches, the Vivoactive 5 would be my pick. If you want an actual Fitbit, though, those are on sale as well. 

Fitbit trackers and smartwatches

All of Fitbit’s major models are on sale today, including the iconic bracelet-styled Charge 6 for $119, originally $159. Opinions vary, but if you want mine: The Charge 6 is the best Fitbit. (If you want a smartwatch, go for a Garmin.) 

If you’re more of a minimalist, though, the Inspire 3 is worth a look. Normally retailing for $99, it’s just $69 today. The Inspire 3 doesn’t have its own GPS chipset, instead relying on your phone for location. It’s also just a more pared-down experience in other ways, with fewer exercise types and fewer apps. 

Samsung watches

Samsung’s Galaxy Watch Ultra is on sale today for just $409, down from $649. It comes in a 47mm size with LTE cellular connectivity, and is basically Samsung’s answer to the Apple Watch Ultra 2. We have more details on its features here

The Best Amazon Spring Sale Deals You Can Get Now


Apple AirPods Pro 2 Wireless Earbuds



$169.99

(List Price $249.00)


Sonos Move 2



$449.00

(List Price $449.00)


Blink Mini 2 (White, 2-Pack)



$37.99

(List Price $69.99)


Amazon Fire HD 10 (2023)



$94.99

(List Price $139.99)


Sony WH-1000XM5



$318.00

(List Price $399.99)


Fitbit Sense 2



$199.95

(List Price $249.95)

Deals are selected by our commerce team

These Are the Best Deals on Tech Products During the Spring Sale Season

We may earn a commission from links on this page. Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.

Cyber Monday is long gone, but with spring sales popping up this week in response to Amazon’s Big Spring Sale event, there’s still plenty of good tech to be found for cheap.

Across Amazon, Best Buy, Walmart, Target, and more, gadgets from laptops to TVs are seeing deep discounts. Shopping these sales can be a bit difficult unless you know how to track an item’s price history, but fortunately, I’ve already done all of the work for you. Keep checking in here throughout the week for the best deals on laptops, TVs, tablets, video games, and more. Prices are accurate as of time of writing, but you can expect them to fluctuate and inventory to sell out, so you may not want to hesitate if you see a sale that grabs you.

The best deals on laptops

Sales events are a great time to buy laptops, as they’re one of the most frequent items to go on sale during these periods. Here are some of my favorite picks for the best laptop deals available now.

  • Apple MacBook Air 13-inch with M4 Chip: $949 at Amazon (was $999). Released earlier this month, Apple’s M4 MacBook Air is already on sale. At time of writing, the discount only applies to the 13-inch model with 16GB of RAM, but that’s still enough for plenty of users.

  • Apple MacBook Pro with M4 Chip: $1,399 at Amazon (was $1,599). For a more powerful Apple computer, the MacBook Pro is the obvious choice. As time of writing, sales are present across all chip options (the M4 has multiple upgrades available), as well as across multiple RAM and storage loadouts, but you will need to stick to a 14-inch screen.

  • Samsung Galaxy Book5 Pro 360: $1,475 at Amazon (was $1,699). A Windows-based alternative to the MacBook Air, although with power potentially rivaling the Pro at points, this lightweight laptop is a touch more expensive, but comes with a higher resolution OLED screen with a higher refresh rate, plus the ability to convert into a tablet.

  • Microsoft Surface Laptop: $980 at Amazon (was $1,400). A cheaper alternative to the MacBook Air, the Microsoft Surface Laptop offers a familiar form factor and, thanks to its Qualcomm chip, higher battery life and greater AI compatibility, although at the cost of some performance.

  • Lenovo IdeaPad 1i: $420 at Best Buy (was $600). This is a more basic, “get the job done” kind of laptop, but with a respectable mid-range chip, surprisingly generous storage for the price, and a touchscreen, there’s quite a bit of value to be had here.

  • HP Victus 16 Gaming Laptop: $900 at Best Buy (was $1,500). The HP Victus 16 is a tremendous deal below $1,000, getting you a respectable chip, 16GB of RAM, and enough storage to get by, but also the RTX 4070 GPU, which is typically reserved for much more expensive machines.

The best deals on tablets

Good tablets are a bit rarer to find deals on during sales events, since iPads so overwhelmingly dominate the space, and Apple can be a little more stringent with supply. Still, there are good opportunities to be found if you’re willing to look.

  • Apple 11-Inch iPad Pro with M4 Chip: $899 at Amazon (was $999). Apple’s first iPad with an OLED screen, the M4 Pro is now available for less than four figures, with deals available for all storage configurations.

  • Samsung Galaxy Tab S9+: $700 at Amazon (was $1,000). A premium Android tablet from Samsung, this rectangle boasts a Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 chip, 12GB of memory, 256GB of storage, a 12-inch 2,800 x 1,752 AMOLED screen, and comes with a stylus.

  • Microsoft Surface Pro 13-Inch: $999 at Best Buy (was $1,200). This pick blurs the line between a tablet and a laptop, coming equipped with Windows 11, which gives it a full desktop ecosystem of apps to explore. Plus, this particular model also has a few Copilot+ goodies thrown in. Storage is 512GB and RAM is 16GB.

The best deals on phones

Similar to tablets, the current phone deals are a bit held back by Apple, as iPhone sales tend to be a bit hit-or-miss, often relying on third-party sellers with refurbished devices. However, if you’re on Android, you have a wealth of options.

  • Google Pixel 9 (Unlocked): $640 at Amazon (was $799). Google’s latest non-pro phone has the Tensor G4 chip, a lot of exclusive Gemini-powered goodies, and a 6.3-inch OLED “Actua” display.

  • Google Pixel 9 Pro (Unlocked): $849 at Amazon (was $1,099). An upgrade to the base Pixel 9, the Pro model has improved cameras, more storage options, and a higher resolution display.

  • Google Pixel 9 Pro XL (Unlocked): $899 at Amazon (was $1,099). Priced similarly to the standard Pixel 9 Pro, the XL offers identical power, but a larger, 6.8-inch display.

  • Samsung Galaxy S25 (Unlocked): $700 at Amazon (was $800). Samsung’s Galaxy phones are a favorite alternative to Google’s Pixels, with a more traditional camera setup and more powerful chips. You lose out on Google’s exclusive Pixel software features, but if you can get used to Samsung’s own ecosystem, there’s also some convenience to be gained with its spin on Android.

  • Samsung Galaxy S25 Ultra (Unlocked): $1,195 at Amazon (was $1,420). An upgrade to the base Samsung Galaxy S25, the Ultra has more storage options, a larger, 6.9-inch screen, better cameras, and a slightly bigger battery.

  • Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6 (Unlocked): $1,068 at Amazon (was $1,220). Flip phones are still an expensive proposition, but the Samsung Galaxy Z Flip 6 is a bit more affordable with the sale. This phone has many of the same specs as the S25, albeit with the camera’s performance being traded out a bit in favor of the foldable screen.

  • Motorola Razr+ (Unlocked): $700 at Amazon (was $1,000). This nostalgic flip phone is a slightly cheaper alternative to the Z Flip series, with a slightly weaker chipset but also a slightly larger size.

The best deals on TVs

Like laptops, TVs almost always go on sale at every opportunity, and waiting until these discounts drop is a great way to get a display that punches above its weight class.

  • LG 77-inch B3 OLED TV: $1,497 at Amazon (was $2,297). OLED is still my favorite display tech out there, and if I can get on my soapbox for a moment, it’s the only one that really compares to CRTs. LG makes some of the best OLED TVs around, and this big-screen model has a 4K resolution and a 120Hz refresh rate. There are four HDMI 2.1 inputs.

  • Amazon 55-inch Fire TV Omni Series: $770 at Amazon (was $900). Amazon’s Fire TVs are a great way to get a lot of screen on a budget. This 4K Mini-LED smart display has a 144Hz refresh rate, supports hands-free Alexa control, comes with up to an 85-inch screen, and has various HDR options.

  • Roku 55-inch Plus Series QLED 4K Smart TV: $430 at Best Buy (was $500). Roku is one of Amazon’s biggest rivals in the budget TV category. Available in up to 75 inches, this TV is 4K, supports Dolby Vision at a lower price point than Amazon’s option, has a 60Hz refresh rate, and comes with Roku’s snappy operating system built in.

  • TCL 55-inch Class Q6-Series 4K Smart Google TV: $300 at Best Buy (was $320). If you’re not big on Amazon’s or Roku’s operating systems, then a TCL TV is a good bet. This model comes in up to 98 inches, has a 4K QLED panel, supports Dolby Vision, and has a 60Hz native refresh rate.

The best sales on video game tech

Video game sales tend to be more often relegated to summer and fall, but there are still a few sales to be found right now, especially on accessories.

  • Xbox Series X 1TB Digital Edition: $435 at Amazon (was $450). Console deals are few and far between during this sales event, but you can snag the current most powerful Xbox for a slight discount right now, but you’ll need to get the version without a disc drive.

  • Amazon Fire TV 4K Max with Xbox Core Wireless Controller and 1 Month Xbox Game Pass Ultimate: $105 at Amazon (was $145). This bundle will snag you Amazon’s best streaming stick plus an Xbox controller and one month of Xbox Game Pass Ultimate, turning it into a full-on cloud gaming console.

  • Xbox Core Wireless Gaming Controller: $45 at Amazon (was $60). Almost no video game accessory is as versatile as the basic Xbox controller, which can work across a slew of devices and has a standard layout that most games recognize immediately.

  • 8BitDo Ultimate 2 Wireless Controller: $48 at Amazon (was $60). This is a reliable third-party alternative to the official Nintendo Switch Pro Controller, with both Bluetooth and 2.4 GHz connectivity, plus motion controls, back paddles, extra trigger buttons, macro compatibility, and durable TMR sticks. Note that you have to be an Amazon Prime member to get this deal.

Shopping for tech? Lifehacker can help you make the right decision. Browse our tech reviews and head-to-head comparisons for everything from laptops and smartwatches to e-bikes and home gyms. Subscribe to our deals newsletter, Add to Cart, for the best sales sent to your inbox, or browse our best-of lists directly on Amazon, including: