How to Fix ‘Tilted’ Dark Mode App Icons in iOS 26

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iOS 26 is here, and with it, Apple’s “Liquid Glass” design revamp. Yesterday, I covered how to quickly undo most of the harshest changes that come with Liquid Glass, but a complaint users are making today requires an entirely separate fix. Luckily, there is an option that could help you, although it’s not for everyone.

Dark Mode icons look a little tilted right now

As users are posting over on Reddit, it turns out that Dark Mode app icons don’t play nicely with iOS 26’s new Liquid Glass aesthetic. How much this will bother you will vary from person to person, but essentially, some folks online (and on the Lifehacker team) are now complaining that their Dark Mode icons look tilted, as if they’re not perfectly dead center.

Personally, I have a hard time seeing this when looking at my home screen as a whole, but after a colleague sent me a more zoomed-in shot, I can see how it would bother him. It’s an optical illusion, as the icon positioning is the same, but it’s there.

tilted Dark Mode app icons

Credit: Joel Cunningham

The problem, it seems, is in new highlights added to certain, but not all, app icon corners while using Dark Mode. The uneven lighting produces an effect that, as reported by Lifehacker sister site Mashable, has some users complaining of dizziness. Worse yet, how prominent the highlights are depends on your background—I can see them more easily over dark parts of my background, but they tend to bleed into lighter parts. 

Technically, those highlights are also there when using app icons with lighter backgrounds, but they’re less noticeable, since they don’t contrast with them as much.

Again, you may not be susceptible to the effect. If I’m not concentrating on it, I do tend to forget about it. But if it is bothering you, what can you do?

Reducing transparency does nothing

Unfortunately, the one-toggle fix that undoes most of the issues with Liquid Glass, “Reduce Transparency,” doesn’t seem to do anything for your app icons. Here’s my iPhone Home Screen with Reduce Transparency on, and the same screen with it off (please don’t judge my unread mail and unchecked reminders).

iPhone Home Screen with Dark Mode app icons and Reduce Transparency off (left) vs. on (right)
iPhone Home Screen with Dark Mode app icons and Reduce Transparency off (left) vs. on (right)
Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt

That’s a shame, since Reduce Transparency is easy to implement: You just turn it on under Settings > Accessibility > Display & Text Size, and it’ll get rid of most of the see-through elements in Liquid Glass for you. But because the icons are solid anyway, it won’t do anything here. Instead, you’ll need to get creative.

Try tinting your app icons

Right now, I unfortunately don’t have a fix for Apple’s Dark Mode app icons. Even custom icons that use Apple’s Dark Mode background color will still have the new highlights. But I do have one piece of advice that will get you close to the same experience.

It turns out, setting your app icons to Dark Mode isn’t the only way to get them to use more subdued colors. If Dark Mode looks ugly to you right now, you could try tinting your app icons instead.

This gives your app icons a monochrome appearance with white or gray text, and while that does unfortunately mean losing out on app icons with more than two colors, it also means you can swap over to other dark colored backgrounds that might look a bit less tilted to you. The offending highlights will still be there, but with the right tinted background, you might be able to make them less noticeable.

To try it out, head to your home screen, then long press until your apps start jiggling. Click Edit in the top left corner, then Customize. In the menu that pops up on the bottom of your screen, pick Tinted.

You’ll get two color picker bars, as well as the option to choose Light or Dark icons (this is separate from the general Light and Dark mode app icons, which aren’t monochrome). Think of the top color picker bar as the app’s general color, and the bottom as a way to get more specific within that color zone. Meanwhile, Light will make the app’s text and graphical elements white, while Dark will use a more grayish tone.

Tinted app icons in iOS 26

Credit: Michelle Ehrhardt

You can play around here to get an app tint you like best, although Apple does have a few shortcut buttons to help you find the color for you. Personally, I like the leftmost button, under the color picker bars, that takes you to a standard black and white if you’ve selected Light or a more subdued black and dark gray if you’ve selected Dark. If neither of those work for you, there’s also an Apple Intelligence button that will try to pick a tint that goes well with your wallpaper, or an eyedropper that will let you pick a color from your wallpaper.

None of this is quite the same as just using Dark Mode icons, but if you’re like me, it might be close enough.

Or, wait for an update

If tinting your app icons doesn’t work for you, though, don’t despair. It’s likely Apple is seeing these complaints and will adjust Liquid Glass accordingly. It already toned it down twice over iOS 26’s beta, so maybe the real solution here is time.

Mets Notes: Plan for Kodai Senga, injury updates on Luis Torrens, Tyrone Taylor

Ahead of the Mets‘ first game of three against the San Diego Padres on Tuesday night at Citi Field, manager Carlos Mendoza had updates on several players’ injury rehabs and what the organization has planned for starter Kodai Senga. 


What’s next for Kodai Senga

The Mets will have the right-hander make a second start for Triple-A Syracuse at the end of this week, but after that, the next step has yet to be determined.

“We’ll go from there,” Mendoza said about what comes next. “But he’s making, for sure, one more.”

In Senga’s first start with Syracuse last Thursday, he allowed one run on three hits over 6.0 innings with eight strikeouts and no walks. The 32-year-old got 18 whiffs on 43 swings with nine called strikes for a 36 percent called strike-whiff rate on 74 total pitches. The forkball was particularly good; he threw 17 in total and got 11 whiffs on 11 swings.

After Mendoza spoke, president of baseball operations David Stearns, in his regularly scheduled media availability, laid out what the organization would need to see from Senga to merit bringing him back to the majors.

“Results always matter, results are a part of it, and it’s where is the stuff?” Stearns said on Tuesday. “Has the stuff ticked up to the point where we feel comfortable that it’s going to consistently get major league hitters out?”

Luis Torrens playing at Syracuse

Torrens is playing on Tuesday night at Triple-A and is scheduled to catch seven innings, Mendoza said. “We’ll see what we got there,” he added about the backstop’s rehab from a right forearm contusion.

Torrens posted a .225/.287/.348 slash line for a .635 OPS with five home runs and 29 RBI over 87 games. He had been much better since the All-Star break, batting .275 with a .764 OPS over the final 74 plate appearances before landing on the IL on Sept. 7.

Tyrone Taylor ramping back up

The center fielder had to step away from his injury rehab as he went on the paternity list, but is set to resume activities as he looks to work his way back to the big-league roster.

“The baby was born yesterday, so he’s supposed to be back here [Wednesday],” Mendoza said. “And then we’ll get him going again and hopefully start playing some rehab games up here shortly.”

Taylor landed on the IL with a hamstring strain at the start of the month. In 109 games with the Mets on the year, the 31-year-old has slashed .218/.277/.315 for a .592 OPS. The time on the IL came at a bad time; he had 10 hits and six RBI with a 1.208 OPS in his final seven games.

No update on Tylor Megill

Mendoza did not have an update on the right-hander, who is expected to see a specialist this week. 

“He’s got another in-person visit this week, and then we gotta wait,” the skipper said.

Megill said he felt tightness when throwing his secondary pitches in his rehab start and was sent for imaging.

David Stearns: ‘No question’ Mets would have approached trade deadline differently knowing how season has played out

President of baseball operations David Stearns and the rest of the Mets’ front office had a busy trade deadline this season. After acquiring reliever Gregory Soto in the days prior, Stearns landed Ryan Helsley, Tyler Rogers, and Cedric Mullins on July 31, seemingly shoring up any glaring holes on the roster.

But since that day, the Mets have gone 15-26, and with all of the struggles the starting rotation has had since that point, questions have arisen about why Stearns didn’t address the rotation at all at the deadline. 

Even before the deadline, there were questions about Kodai Senga, Frankie Montas, and Sean Manaea staying healthy and Clay Holmes’ durability during his first year as a starter.

Hindsight is always 20/20, but Stearns said on Tuesday that he would have done things differently had he known where the rotation would be at this point in time.

“I think if I knew exactly how our season would play out, absolutely (I would have approached the trade deadline differently). No question,” Stearns said. “We make the decisions we make at the time with the information we had. I’m very comfortable with the process we went through that led us to those decisions, but yeah, we did not play well during the month of August, and frankly, to this point through September. We’ve had various segments of our team that haven’t performed certainly to the level that we anticipated as we approached the trade deadline, and had I had that knowledge going in, yes, it would have changed what we did.

“I think we’re always trying to project out various possibilities, and there’s a probabilistic nature to everything we do, and we understand that we’re not going to get everything right. We’re unlikely to predict with perfection what seasons are going to look like, what stretches of seasons are going to look like. So I think certainly we have to learn from this and determine whether there are things we could have seen that we did not, but I am confident in our evaluative capabilities and our work on the whole that we’ve accomplished.”

Helsley has struggled with pitch-tipping and consistency, as evidenced by his 10.29 ERA as a Met, and while Rogers has pitched well and Soto has been up-and-down, Mullins has scuffled, posting a .571 OPS in 34 games as a Met.

“I think Cedric came over to a new team for the first time in his career, adjusting to a new organization, little bit of a different role. Got off to a little bit of a struggle, and sometimes that can put pressure on players, and I think he’s spoken about that a little bit, that sometimes you can press,” Stearns said when asked about Mullins’ struggles. “I do think he’s beginning to come out of it. I think we’re seeing him have a little bit more productive at-bats, staying in at-bats, getting on time with the fastball little bit better. And so that’s a really good sign for us.”

The question, then, is a simple one: what exactly went wrong?

“First of all I would say we’re not at the end of the line yet, so there are potentially chapters yet to be written, but to this point it’s a fair assessment that our trade deadline, at least some of our trade deadline acquisitions, have not performed to the level that we expected or the level that they have performed at throughout their careers,” Stearns said. “Part of that is streakiness and randomness, and this happens every year in baseball with some trade deadline acquisitions. Part of it is, we need to look and ensure that we’re doing everything we can to help these guys succeed. 

“We take a lot of pride in, when players come here, allowing them to be the best versions of themselves. We’ve talked a lot about that, and so when that doesn’t happen, we need to be honest about that as well and see what more we can do.”

As poor as the Mets have played since the start of August, particularly during the recently snapped eight-game losing streak, the club still currently owns the third and final NL Wild Card spot, sitting 1.5 games ahead of the Arizona Diamondbacks and 2.0 games ahead of both the San Francisco Giants and the Cincinnati Reds.

As Stearns said, the story of the Mets’ 2025 season hasn’t been completed just yet, and all he and the rest of the club can do now is focus on doing whatever is needed to make the dance and play in October.

“I think when you’re sitting where we were in mid-June, we would not have expected to be in this spot,” said Stearns. “There’s no question about that. We’ll have time to evaluate and diagnose and do all of that stuff. For right now, my focus is here from here forward, what can we do to win as many games as possible, and that’s in the regular season and the postseason.”

You Can Get a Lifetime License to Windows 11 Pro for $13 Right Now

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If your current Windows setup is feeling a bit outdated or you’re setting up a brand-new PC, you might want to check out this Microsoft Windows 11 Pro deal on StackSocial—you can get this single-device lifetime license for just $13, which would usually cost you $200 at the Microsoft Store. Once you buy, the redemption code and setup instructions hit your inbox instantly. That said, make sure your system is eligible. This isn’t an upgrade path for unsupported PCs—it’s a fresh install for machines that meet the full list of Windows 11 Pro requirements.

Now, about the OS itself—it feels like Windows finally got a glow-up without messing with your workflow. The layout is cleaner, Snap Layouts and virtual desktops make multitasking smoother, and redocking windows actually works like you’d expect. If you’re into voice typing or just want better search across apps and docs, it delivers. Windows 11 Pro also throws in some solid pro tools like BitLocker for encryption, Hyper-V for virtualization, and even a sandbox mode for testing apps safely. You’re also getting DirectX 12 Ultimate, so your hardware can shine during gaming or graphic-heavy tasks, assuming your machine is beefy enough.

Security is another win here. Windows 11 Pro doubles down with biometric login, Smart App Control, and TPM 2.0 requirements, which makes it a tougher nut to crack. It also includes the new AI-powered Copilot and baked-in Microsoft Teams support, which might appeal to remote workers. Just a heads up, you won’t get an Office upgrade bundled in with this deal—this is strictly a Windows license. It will work alongside Office if you have a separate license, though (if you’re on a Mac using Parallels Pro). If your PC meets the specs (like a 1GHz processor, 4GB RAM, TPM 2.0, and UEFI firmware, among others), and you’ve been holding off on a full Windows upgrade, this $13 deal is about as straightforward and affordable as it gets. Just be sure to double-check your specs before clicking “buy.”

Knicks sign Trey Jemison III, Tosan Evbuomwan to two-way contracts

The Knicks have signed center Trey Jemison III and forward Tosan Evbuomwan to two-way contracts, sources tell SNY NBA Insider Ian Begley

Jemison, a 6-foot-11, 270-pound big man, will provide New York with some additional front-court depth.

Evbuomwan’s signing was originally announced on Tuesday as an Exhibit 10 contract, but Begley reported it will be a two-way deal.

Jemison, 25, has appeared in 63 NBA games (14 starts) with four organizations over the past two seasons. He played 22 games with the Lakers and 16 games with the Pelicans a year ago, averaging 10.3 minutes with 2.5 points and 2.8 rebounds during his time with both franchises.

The center saw his most extensive action with the Memphis Grizzlies during the 2023-24 season, making 14 starts out of 23 appearances, averaging 7.4 points, 5.8 rebounds, 1.2 blocks, and 1.2 assists in 24.9 minutes. He went undrafted in 2003 out of UAB, appearing for the Suns’ Summer League squad before latching on with the New Orleans Pelicans’ G League affiliate.

Evbuomwan, 24, has made 45 career appearances over the past two seasons, including eight starts. He last played with the Nets during the 2024-25 season, averaging 9.5 points, 4.3 rebounds, and 2.0 assists in 23.8 minutes off the bench. The 6-foot-8 forward went undrafted out of Princeton in 2023.

The Knicks will enter the preseason with two players signed to two-way contracts. (NBA teams are allowed to carry a maximum of three players on two-way deals.) Kevin McCullar Jr. is expected to return on a two-way deal to fill the final spot, Begley noted.

How Phillies lefty Cristopher Sánchez went from overlooked prospect to depth arm to Game 1 playoff starter in just a few years

PHILADELPHIA — Early in 2024, Cristopher Sánchez started talking to himself.

At the time, the Phillies’ left-hander was coming off a solid, though unspectacular, 2023 season as the team’s No. 5 starter. In the grand scheme of things, it was a landmark year for Sánchez. The lean southpaw had established himself as a legitimate big leaguer, going from an emergency arm to a Game 4 playoff starter. It was a monumental accomplishment for a player who signed out of the Dominican Republic as a teenager for $65,000.

But Sánchez wanted to level up again.

So that winter, he started employing self-talk during his bullpens, treating his practice sessions with game-like intensity and occasionally referring to himself in the third person. He also embarked upon a throwing program to build velocity. He hit the weight room, putting real muscle onto his wiry frame. His sinking fastball, which averaged 92.1 mph in 2023, jumped into the 94 mph range. That added heat fostered more confidence and conviction, making him a more formidable pitcher.

“That was one of my goals during that offseason,” Sánchez explained via team interpreter Diego D’Aniello. “Not only to add velocity but also to work on my body, specifically my legs. Getting strong, staying strong and keeping my body as strong as possible was something that would help throughout the year.”

Sánchez, according to Phillies pitching coach Caleb Cotham, had always moved like someone who belongs in The Show. But the version of Sánchez who showed up to spring training in 2024 was a different animal: a frontline hurler who could shoulder 180 meaningful innings, make All-Star teams and win postseason games.

That’s exactly what happened. Sánchez delivered 181 2/3 innings with a 3.32 ERA last year, earning his first All-Star nod. He finished 10th in NL Cy Young voting and tossed five quality frames vs. the Mets in Philadelphia’s only playoff win. He also secured his financial future by inking a four-year, $22 million extension. The contract, which now looks like a massive bargain, bought out all four of Sánchez’s arbitration years and gave the Phillies two below-market team options.

But only this past winter, once the dust settled on his breakout 2024, did Sánchez start to think of himself as that all-important, three-letter word: Ace.

“Last year was my first season as a [full-time MLB] starter,” he said. “After last year, then maybe I started thinking about it.”

This season, “Sanchy” as teammates and coaches call him, has pushed himself into MLB’s upper echelon of starting pitchers. He ranks in the top 10 league-wide in most significant statistical categories, including ERA, innings pitched and strikeouts. He was such an egregious All-Star snub that his absence ballooned into national news. He struts to and from the bullpen before his starts with the moxie of, as one Phillie described it, “an MFer.” If not for Paul Skenes’ generational brilliance, Sánchez would have a legitimate Cy Young argument. He’ll have to settle for runner-up instead.

He has become, unequivocally, an ace.

It’s a remarkable development story. Rarely does a player’s improvement occur so linearly. Sánchez entered professional baseball way back in 2013, when he signed with the Tampa Bay Rays as an international free agent. Like many long-limbed pitchers who need to grow into their bodies, he was a slow burn. It took him five seasons to reach a full-season minor-league affiliate. His fastball sat around 90 mph. Ahead of the 2019 season — when the Rays needed to add him to their 40-man roster or leave him unprotected in the Rule-5 draft — he was a complete nonfactor in the prospect world. That winter, there were 86 players mentioned on FanGraphs’ list of Rays prospects. Sánchez was not one of them.

But in 2019, Tampa Bay’s renowned pitching development apparatus helped Sánchez lift his velocity by a few ticks. He threw 75 quality innings and upped his stock. Still, there was no room for him on Tampa Bay’s loaded roster, so in November, the Rays traded him to the Phillies for a teenage Australian infielder named Curtis Mead.

For a while, that swap looked like a catastrophe. Mead blossomed into a top-50 prospect, while Sánchez appeared to stall out at Triple-A Lehigh Valley. He debuted, unceremoniously, for the Phillies in 2021. The club, clearly viewing him as a role player, see-sawed him between Triple-A and the bigs. Sánchez went back and forth between Allentown and Philadelphia a whopping 12 times across ‘21 and ‘22. The Phillies, flush with starters, had no room in their rotation for an inconsistent development project.

[Get more Philadelphia news: Phillies team feed]

Then, in 2023, an opening appeared. Left-hander Bailey Falter struggled mightily as the team’s fifth starter and was demoted in May. The Phillies trudged forward with spot starters and bullpen games for a month until they handed Sánchez an opportunity in mid-June. He tossed four scoreless innings, allowing just one hit against the Athletics.

He hasn’t been back to Lehigh Valley since.

“He’s definitely put on some physicality. Just putting on some mass really helped him,” Cotham explained. “And I think just tightening up his delivery. Over the last three, four years, there was a lot going on. There was a big step, a big rock back, his arms were going everywhere. Now it’s really compact. It’s direct to the plate, but it’s still his style, his rhythm.”

Sánchez’s style is quality over quantity. In an era when more pitchers are deepening their arsenals, Sánchez relies on just three offerings: a sinker, a changeup and a slider. The changeup, a dastardly, fall-off-the-table monster that ranks as one of MLB’s most effective pitches, is the real moneymaker. Meanwhile, Sánchez’s added athleticism and confidence have enabled him to pinpoint the heater to his glove side and under the hands of right-handed hitters more consistently. And the slider has become an impact pitch against all hitters; he can rip it away from a lefty and back-foot it to a righty.

It’s an effective approach and one that Sánchez has honed over the years as he has gotten stronger, smarter, better. Everyone around the Phillies commends him for his work ethic. Baseball people tend to appreciate gradual development more than they appreciate natural ability. Nearly every big leaguer works hard, but with time and focus, Sánchez has built himself into something. That garners respect.

“I’m always astounded by him,” Phillies manager Rob Thomson recently told Taryn Hatcher of NBC Sports Philadelphia. “I always think about the first time I saw him, and it was trouble for him to throw a strike, to be honest. … He’s kind of evolved into this pitcher that has power and great poise and how tough he is. I’ve been around a long time, as we know, and I’m not sure l’ve ever seen the evolution of a pitcher like I have with Sánchez.”

In July, through no fault of his own, Sánchez became a main character in a great baseball debate.

Despite stellar first-half numbers, the 28-year-old was not named to the National League All-Star team. That remained the case even as replacements trickled in. Then, when Brewers rookie Jacob Misiorowski and his five career starts were added to the roster, all hell broke loose. 

Upon learning the news after a game, multiple Phillies lambasted MLB for choosing Misiorowski over Sánchez. Even though Sánchez was slated to start the final game of the first half, thus rendering him unavailable for the midsummer showcase, his teammates were incensed that one of the best pitchers in baseball would be spending the week on vacation. To help quell the uproar, Phillies owner John Middleton paid Sánchez his $50,000 All-Star bonus anyway.

Sánchez was relatively unbothered by it all. He smiles when asked about it now. More than anything, he was touched by how passionately his teammates supported him.

“It makes me really proud that they did that, you know?” he said. “It showed me how much they cared for me and how much they valued me, not only as a player but as a person, too. I think that it showed that maybe I earned a little bit of their love and their respect over the years.”

Instead of traveling to Atlanta, Sánchez stayed in sunny San Diego (where the Phils finished the first half) for a few days with his family before flying home to Philadelphia. It was relaxing, rejuvenating. Cristopher and his wife, Kaimary, welcomed their first child, Cristopher Jr., last autumn. A picture of the 11-month-old’s toothless smile is Sánchez’s phone background. He beams like a floodlight when asked anything about his son.

That time spent, he implied, was better than a few days at the All-Star Game.

For the Phillies, Sánchez’s ascension couldn’t have come at a better time. Zack Wheeler, arguably the sport’s best pitcher of the past half-decade, went down on Aug. 16 due to a blood clot in his shoulder that turned out to be a thoracic outlet issue. He is done for the season. The club’s entire offensive core — Bryce Harper, Kyle Schwarber, Trea Turner, JT Realmuto — is on the wrong side of 30. Schwarber and Realmuto will hit free agency this winter. The time, for these Phillies, is very much now.

That’s why losing Wheeler, who was crafting a Cy Young campaign of his own, was such a crushing blow. But since his final outing, the Phillies are a league-best 20-9. Over that span, they have turned a five-game division lead into a resounding NL East title, solidifying themselves as World Series front-runners. There is a contagious optimism emerging in south Philadelphia, and Sánchez is a huge reason behind it.

Barring an improbable late-September collapse, the lanky lefty will climb the Citizens Bank Park mound on Oct. 4 for Game 1 of the NLDS. He will become just the fifth Phillies pitcher this century to start a postseason opener, joining Wheeler, Cole Hamels, Cliff Lee and Roy Halladay.

For all he is and has become, Sánchez has only two career postseason appearances to his name: a total clunker in the 2023 NLCS against the Arizona Diamondbacks and that solid, five-inning showing in last year’s wacky NLDS Game 2. But despite his relative lack of experience, Sánchez is quite familiar with high-stress pitching. Earlier in his career, he was a reliever for his boyhood club, Toros del Este, in the Dominican Winter League, and he won a championship with the team in 2020. By comparison, he says, playing for Philadelphia’s demanding fans is easy.

“It’s all your friends and family down there,” he said. “And the fans speak your same language, so you hear all kinds of crazy stuff.”

Whether those adventures help Sánchez maintain his composure in October remains to be seen. But he’s as prepared and as driven as anybody could be. In some ways, he’s playing with house money. His journey — from minor-league afterthought to a depth arm overly familiar with Interstate 476 to one of baseball’s best — is already a success. And while he’s hungry, ravenous for more, Sánchez has already achieved more than anybody could have imagined.

Except, of course, for himself.

How Phillies lefty Cristopher Sánchez went from overlooked prospect to depth arm to Game 1 playoff starter in just a few years

PHILADELPHIA — Early in 2024, Cristopher Sánchez started talking to himself.

At the time, the Phillies’ left-hander was coming off a solid, though unspectacular, 2023 season as the team’s No. 5 starter. In the grand scheme of things, it was a landmark year for Sánchez. The lean southpaw had established himself as a legitimate big leaguer, going from an emergency arm to a Game 4 playoff starter. It was a monumental accomplishment for a player who signed out of the Dominican Republic as a teenager for $65,000.

But Sánchez wanted to level up again.

So that winter, he started employing self-talk during his bullpens, treating his practice sessions with game-like intensity and occasionally referring to himself in the third person. He also embarked upon a throwing program to build velocity. He hit the weight room, putting real muscle onto his wiry frame. His sinking fastball, which averaged 92.1 mph in 2023, jumped into the 94 mph range. That added heat fostered more confidence and conviction, making him a more formidable pitcher.

“That was one of my goals during that offseason,” Sánchez explained via team interpreter Diego D’Aniello. “Not only to add velocity but also to work on my body, specifically my legs. Getting strong, staying strong and keeping my body as strong as possible was something that would help throughout the year.”

Sánchez, according to Phillies pitching coach Caleb Cotham, had always moved like someone who belongs in The Show. But the version of Sánchez who showed up to spring training in 2024 was a different animal: a frontline hurler who could shoulder 180 meaningful innings, make All-Star teams and win postseason games.

That’s exactly what happened. Sánchez delivered 181 2/3 innings with a 3.32 ERA last year, earning his first All-Star nod. He finished 10th in NL Cy Young voting and tossed five quality frames vs. the Mets in Philadelphia’s only playoff win. He also secured his financial future by inking a four-year, $22 million extension. The contract, which now looks like a massive bargain, bought out all four of Sánchez’s arbitration years and gave the Phillies two below-market team options.

But only this past winter, once the dust settled on his breakout 2024, did Sánchez start to think of himself as that all-important, three-letter word: Ace.

“Last year was my first season as a [full-time MLB] starter,” he said. “After last year, then maybe I started thinking about it.”

This season, “Sanchy” as teammates and coaches call him, has pushed himself into MLB’s upper echelon of starting pitchers. He ranks in the top 10 league-wide in most significant statistical categories, including ERA, innings pitched and strikeouts. He was such an egregious All-Star snub that his absence ballooned into national news. He struts to and from the bullpen before his starts with the moxie of, as one Phillie described it, “an MFer.” If not for Paul Skenes’ generational brilliance, Sánchez would have a legitimate Cy Young argument. He’ll have to settle for runner-up instead.

He has become, unequivocally, an ace.

It’s a remarkable development story. Rarely does a player’s improvement occur so linearly. Sánchez entered professional baseball way back in 2013, when he signed with the Tampa Bay Rays as an international free agent. Like many long-limbed pitchers who need to grow into their bodies, he was a slow burn. It took him five seasons to reach a full-season minor-league affiliate. His fastball sat around 90 mph. Ahead of the 2019 season — when the Rays needed to add him to their 40-man roster or leave him unprotected in the Rule-5 draft — he was a complete nonfactor in the prospect world. That winter, there were 86 players mentioned on FanGraphs’ list of Rays prospects. Sánchez was not one of them.

But in 2019, Tampa Bay’s renowned pitching development apparatus helped Sánchez lift his velocity by a few ticks. He threw 75 quality innings and upped his stock. Still, there was no room for him on Tampa Bay’s loaded roster, so in November, the Rays traded him to the Phillies for a teenage Australian infielder named Curtis Mead.

For a while, that swap looked like a catastrophe. Mead blossomed into a top-50 prospect, while Sánchez appeared to stall out at Triple-A Lehigh Valley. He debuted, unceremoniously, for the Phillies in 2021. The club, clearly viewing him as a role player, see-sawed him between Triple-A and the bigs. Sánchez went back and forth between Allentown and Philadelphia a whopping 12 times across ‘21 and ‘22. The Phillies, flush with starters, had no room in their rotation for an inconsistent development project.

[Get more Philadelphia news: Phillies team feed]

Then, in 2023, an opening appeared. Left-hander Bailey Falter struggled mightily as the team’s fifth starter and was demoted in May. The Phillies trudged forward with spot starters and bullpen games for a month until they handed Sánchez an opportunity in mid-June. He tossed four scoreless innings, allowing just one hit against the Athletics.

He hasn’t been back to Lehigh Valley since.

“He’s definitely put on some physicality. Just putting on some mass really helped him,” Cotham explained. “And I think just tightening up his delivery. Over the last three, four years, there was a lot going on. There was a big step, a big rock back, his arms were going everywhere. Now it’s really compact. It’s direct to the plate, but it’s still his style, his rhythm.”

Sánchez’s style is quality over quantity. In an era when more pitchers are deepening their arsenals, Sánchez relies on just three offerings: a sinker, a changeup and a slider. The changeup, a dastardly, fall-off-the-table monster that ranks as one of MLB’s most effective pitches, is the real moneymaker. Meanwhile, Sánchez’s added athleticism and confidence have enabled him to pinpoint the heater to his glove side and under the hands of right-handed hitters more consistently. And the slider has become an impact pitch against all hitters; he can rip it away from a lefty and back-foot it to a righty.

It’s an effective approach and one that Sánchez has honed over the years as he has gotten stronger, smarter, better. Everyone around the Phillies commends him for his work ethic. Baseball people tend to appreciate gradual development more than they appreciate natural ability. Nearly every big leaguer works hard, but with time and focus, Sánchez has built himself into something. That garners respect.

“I’m always astounded by him,” Phillies manager Rob Thomson recently told Taryn Hatcher of NBC Sports Philadelphia. “I always think about the first time I saw him, and it was trouble for him to throw a strike, to be honest. … He’s kind of evolved into this pitcher that has power and great poise and how tough he is. I’ve been around a long time, as we know, and I’m not sure l’ve ever seen the evolution of a pitcher like I have with Sánchez.”

In July, through no fault of his own, Sánchez became a main character in a great baseball debate.

Despite stellar first-half numbers, the 28-year-old was not named to the National League All-Star team. That remained the case even as replacements trickled in. Then, when Brewers rookie Jacob Misiorowski and his five career starts were added to the roster, all hell broke loose. 

Upon learning the news after a game, multiple Phillies lambasted MLB for choosing Misiorowski over Sánchez. Even though Sánchez was slated to start the final game of the first half, thus rendering him unavailable for the midsummer showcase, his teammates were incensed that one of the best pitchers in baseball would be spending the week on vacation. To help quell the uproar, Phillies owner John Middleton paid Sánchez his $50,000 All-Star bonus anyway.

Sánchez was relatively unbothered by it all. He smiles when asked about it now. More than anything, he was touched by how passionately his teammates supported him.

“It makes me really proud that they did that, you know?” he said. “It showed me how much they cared for me and how much they valued me, not only as a player but as a person, too. I think that it showed that maybe I earned a little bit of their love and their respect over the years.”

Instead of traveling to Atlanta, Sánchez stayed in sunny San Diego (where the Phils finished the first half) for a few days with his family before flying home to Philadelphia. It was relaxing, rejuvenating. Cristopher and his wife, Kaimary, welcomed their first child, Cristopher Jr., last autumn. A picture of the 11-month-old’s toothless smile is Sánchez’s phone background. He beams like a floodlight when asked anything about his son.

That time spent, he implied, was better than a few days at the All-Star Game.

For the Phillies, Sánchez’s ascension couldn’t have come at a better time. Zack Wheeler, arguably the sport’s best pitcher of the past half-decade, went down on Aug. 16 due to a blood clot in his shoulder that turned out to be a thoracic outlet issue. He is done for the season. The club’s entire offensive core — Bryce Harper, Kyle Schwarber, Trea Turner, JT Realmuto — is on the wrong side of 30. Schwarber and Realmuto will hit free agency this winter. The time, for these Phillies, is very much now.

That’s why losing Wheeler, who was crafting a Cy Young campaign of his own, was such a crushing blow. But since his final outing, the Phillies are a league-best 20-9. Over that span, they have turned a five-game division lead into a resounding NL East title, solidifying themselves as World Series front-runners. There is a contagious optimism emerging in south Philadelphia, and Sánchez is a huge reason behind it.

Barring an improbable late-September collapse, the lanky lefty will climb the Citizens Bank Park mound on Oct. 4 for Game 1 of the NLDS. He will become just the fifth Phillies pitcher this century to start a postseason opener, joining Wheeler, Cole Hamels, Cliff Lee and Roy Halladay.

For all he is and has become, Sánchez has only two career postseason appearances to his name: a total clunker in the 2023 NLCS against the Arizona Diamondbacks and that solid, five-inning showing in last year’s wacky NLDS Game 2. But despite his relative lack of experience, Sánchez is quite familiar with high-stress pitching. Earlier in his career, he was a reliever for his boyhood club, Toros del Este, in the Dominican Winter League, and he won a championship with the team in 2020. By comparison, he says, playing for Philadelphia’s demanding fans is easy.

“It’s all your friends and family down there,” he said. “And the fans speak your same language, so you hear all kinds of crazy stuff.”

Whether those adventures help Sánchez maintain his composure in October remains to be seen. But he’s as prepared and as driven as anybody could be. In some ways, he’s playing with house money. His journey — from minor-league afterthought to a depth arm overly familiar with Interstate 476 to one of baseball’s best — is already a success. And while he’s hungry, ravenous for more, Sánchez has already achieved more than anybody could have imagined.

Except, of course, for himself.

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The Eufy Video Smart Lock E330 is a multitasking three-in-one smart home device that combines a fingerprint-scanning smart lock,  a 2K HD camera, and a video doorbell. Right now, it’s 37% off at Amazon, marking its lowest price in the past few months.

If you want a multipurpose smart lock with a clean, minimalist aesthetic, this gadget has been vetted by PCMag, which dubbed the best smart lock of 2023.

You can unlock this thing in multiple ways: via fingerprint, by inserting a pin into the keypad, or by using an app or even voice control via Alexa and Google Assistant. (Of course, you can also stick a manual key into the keyhole, which is hidden behind the doorbell button.) The E330 has built-in WiFi and 8GB of local storage (no ongoing fees or subscription required). When paired with the Eufy HomeBase 3, you can expand storage up to 17TB.

The 2K HD camera offers sharper image quality than 1080p video doorbells, and four infrared LEDs enable night vision. Intelligent motion detection and dual motion sensors help the device distinguish humans from vehicles, according to PCMag’s review. It also has an IP65 weather resistance. Because the camera is housed in a lock located in the center of the door, the field of view may be more limited than a doorbell camera mounted above or to the side, and door jambs may also restrict the view. 

While the Eufy Video Smart Lock E330 is normally on the pricey side at $300, its current discount takes it down to $220. It even comes with all the tools you need to replace your old lock.

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YouTube Livestreams Are About to Get Much More Mobile Friendly

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Among competitors like Twitch and even Instagram, YouTube might not be the go-to name in livestreaming, but its latest features are doing their best to change that. Announced at Google’s Made on YouTube event today, the site will soon let streamers go live with simultaneous horizontal and vertical streams, plus use AI to automatically “clip that.” Oh, and there’s some new corporate cross-promotion, too.

Stream horizontally and vertically at the same time

Currently in testing and set to get a wider release “in the coming months,” YouTube’s combined support for horizontal and vertical streaming is probably the most exciting news to me here. I tend to put streams on in the background, and I much prefer doing that on a second monitor rather than on my phone. But with sites like TikTok getting more popular these days, plenty of streamers are eschewing more traditional platforms for them, meaning I’m likely to miss out on content unless I go looking for vertically oriented streams on my mobile device.

Now, though, YouTube will let creators put out both horizontal versions of their streams, meant for larger screens, and vertical ones meant for smaller screens, at the same time. That means there’ll be less incentive to stick with a mobile-only platform to try to hop on the new trend, and users across all devices will be able to watch streams however they wish. Whether you’re watching the horizontal stream or the vertical one, you’ll be thrown into a chat room with everyone, and the streamer won’t have split view counts across different uploads. The vertical stream will just have a cropped or letterboxed view, as usual, depending on the content. It seems like a perfect solution, and I’m excited to see more creators trying it out once it’s available to them—finally, at least on YouTube, I won’t have to worry that I’m missing a stream from a favorite creator by not watching on my phone.

AI-generated livestream highlights

Meanwhile, as for actually watching streams themselves, YouTube’s making it a bit easier for creators to create highlights from their streams. Personally, while I do have favorite creators, I’ll admit I don’t have the time to watch all of their content, and will often just sort through clips in my free time instead. Unfortunately, not everything gets clipped, because it takes manual effort to do that—that’s why you’ll sometimes see creators tell their fans to “clip that” after a memorable moment. Now, though, YouTube’s throwing some automation into the mix. Starting “in the next few weeks,” you’ll be able to task AI with sorting through your livestreams to automatically find highlights and turn them into YouTube shorts, which you’ll be able to check before uploading. It’s kind of become expected in some corners of the internet for stream clips to be uploaded via unofficial channels, since they currently need a bit of manual work. While I’ve seen streamers express appreciation to their fans for doing this, I also do worry that I’m not supporting the actual content creators enough by watching through these sources. Hopefully, the new tool will make it easier to see clips straight from creators themselves.

Live reaction and streaming ‘Playables’

Live reaction on YouTube

Credit: Google

Finally, there are two additional features that are set to make it a lot easier to promote content via YouTube. The first is “React Live,” which will allow you to start a vertical livestream with content you’re watching in the upper half and your own feed in the bottom half. This will make it easier for creators to create reaction streams, without forcing them to capture video on their own, but it’ll only work with events and creators that allows their content to be reacted to. Still, if you like to watch tech keynotes alongside your favorite commentators, this should allow creators to start them up without bothering to independently license a stream first, assuming the company behind the keynote allows reaction streams. YouTube expects this to enter testing “early next year.”

The second is the ability to stream YouTube’s “Playables” browser games with the touch of a button, again without needing to capture the gameplay yourself. Having played a bunch of these, I personally think the quality is all over the place, but it should be a good way to get started with streaming without worrying about tech or capture software. And there are a few noteworthy games in there, including Angry Birds Showdown and Cut the Rope. YouTube says this should come to some creators next month, ahead of a larger rollout later this year.

Why does this matter?

I’m personally thrilled to see YouTube drop a few barriers to streaming, both by making it easier to find content to react to, as well as to reach multiple types of viewers at once. In particular, the new updates seem designed to help the site cross the threshold between desktop and mobile without losing its existing audience, which is funny, given that one of YouTube’s top competitors just made it harder to stream on mobile.

In order to go live on Instagram, as of one month ago, you now need to have a public account and at least 1,000 followers. That probably saves Instagram some server load, but also kills new talent right out of the door. With YouTube quickly catching up, it’s possible it could soon be eating Meta’s lunch. Will other streaming sites be next?