Red-faced Mets owner forced to apologize to fans after epic-fail season despite spending $340M on Dream Team

The billionaire owner of the New York Mets apologized to fans on Monday, after the team crashed out of the 2025 MLB season without securing a spot in the playoffs, despite boasting a $340 million payroll that’s one of the league’s highest.

“I owe you an apology,” Steven Cohen, who bought the team in 2020, wrote on X on Monday. “You did your part by showing up and supporting the team. We didn’t do our part. We will do a post-mortem and figure out the obvious and less obvious reasons why the team didn’t perform up to your and my expectations.”

“I know how much time and effort you have put into this team,” he added. “The result was unacceptable.”

The club’s season ended Sunday with a 4-0 loss to the Miami Marlins, prolonging the 39-year World Series drought for the Mets.

“There are no words to describe what we’re going through,” Mets manager Carlos Mendoza said after the game. “It’s pain, frustration, you name it. We came in with a lot of expectations, and here we are going home. Not only did we fall short. We didn’t even get into October. Pissed. Sad. Frustrated. You name it.”

An avalanche of big-money signings still have not translated to a World Series berth for the New York Mets, who crashed out of the MLB on Sunday without securing a spot in the playoffs (AP)

The disappointing end to the campaign comes despite a promising season where in mid-June the Mets had the best record in baseball.

“I said at one point in the year, I felt like it was the most talented team I’ve ever played on,” outfielder Brandon Nimmo told MLB.com after the loss in Miami. “And we weren’t able to make the playoffs. That’s obviously coming up short and a failure in my mind.”

However, that momentum fell apart, as the Mets suffered three different seven-game losing streaks and saw stars including Kodai Senga, Griffin Canning, and Tylor Megill pick up injuries.

Mets fans are hoping major signings like the $765 million man Juan Soto can help the team end its four-decade World Series drought (AP)

While the team had the second-best offense in the National League, commentators also pointed to poor defense down the regular season stretch as a hole for the Queens-based team.

Mets fans have been eager to see Cohen’s splashy tenure at the team pay off, one that’s seen blockbuster contracts like 2021’s $341 million deal for Francisco Lindor and last year’s record-breaking $765 million bid for Juan Soto.

They got a taste of that progress last year, when the Mets made it to the 2024 National League Championship Series.

Personnel changes are expected at the Mets in the offseason, with first baseman Pete Alonso saying he will opt out of his deal and become a free agent, while closer Edwin Diaz says he’s considering doing the same.

There are reportedly no plans to fire Mendoza, though.

Twins fire manager Rocco Baldelli after 70-92 season

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The Minnesota Twins fired manager Rocco Baldelli on Monday, ending his seven-year tenure that included three AL Central titles after a second straight disappointing season.

Minnesota announced Baldelli’s firing following a season marked by a major selloff leading up to the trade deadline after the team faltered in June and failed to mount any momentum in July. The Twins (70-92) went 19-35 after the deadline passed following the departure of 10 players off their major league roster, with only the Colorado Rockies faring worse over the final two months.

The Twins finished with the fourth-worst record in the major leagues and their worst mark since 2016, when they went 59-103 after firing longtime general manager Terry Ryan at midseason. Current team president Derek Falvey was hired to replace Ryan after that.

“Over the past seven years Rocco has been much more than our manager. He has been a trusted partner and teammate to me in leading this organization,” Falvey said in a statement. “Together we shared a deep care for the Twins, for our players and staff, and for doing everything in our power to put this club in the best position to succeed. Along the way we experienced some meaningful accomplishments, and I will always be proud of those, even as I wish we had ultimately achieved more.

“This is a difficult day because of what Rocco represents to so many people here. He led with honesty, integrity, and an unwavering commitment to our players and staff. He gave himself fully to this role and I have tremendous respect and gratitude for the way he carried himself and the way he showed up every single day.”

For the second straight year, uncertainty around Baldelli’s status hovered around the club. The Twins, who went 87-75 in 2023 to win their third AL Central title under Baldelli and their first series in the playoffs in 21 years, were in firm control of a wild-card spot down the stretch last season before tumbling out of contention with a 12-27 record over the last six weeks to land at 82-80.

Factoring that finish into their extended funk this year, the Twins are 82-119 over their last 201 games for a .408 winning percentage. That includes a 13-game winning streak they produced earlier this season.

Attendance has swooned at Target Field, with the Twins finishing with an 81-home game total of a little more than 1.7 million tickets sold, their lowest number in a non-pandemic season since 2000 when they played at the Metrodome and finished 69-93. Fans have mostly directed their disdain toward ownership, with deep frustration over cost-cutting that came after the 2023 breakthrough. The Pohlad family put the franchise up for sale last year, but decided last month to keep control and bring on two new investment groups for an infusion of cash to help pay down debt.

The dizzying trade-deadline activity left Baldelli and his staff without much to work with down the stretch, though All-Star center fielder Byron Buxton was a bright spot in a breakthrough season for his health and rookie second baseman Luke Keaschall provided consistent production and a professional approach at the plate belying his inexperience.

The departures of shortstop Carlos Correa, outfielder Harrison Bader, first baseman Ty France and multi-position player Willi Castro robbed the lineup of experience and steadiness, but that was nothing like what happened to Baldelli’s bullpen.

The Twins traded their five best relievers, from closer Jhoan Duran on down, and left the final 54 games to a ragtag group that had eight blown saves in 18 opportunities during that span. The conversion rate of 44.4% ranked second-worst in the major leagues over the final two months.

Baldelli was hired before the 2019 season to replace Hall of Famer Paul Molitor, with Falvey citing his adaptivity to the data-based direction of baseball strategy and his communication skill in distilling it to coaches and players and clearly setting expectations and preferences.

Particularly in this modern age of analytics, there’s plenty of mystery about just how much impact a manager in the dugout truly has on a baseball team’s won-loss record, but the overall performance — even with the post-trade deadline roster depletion this year — and lack of life from the club lately suggested some type of staffing change would be warranted.

These Are the Best Free Apps to Prep for the SAT

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Summer and fall are the perfect time to prepare for standardized aptitude tests. Prepping through summer will help you be ready for a fall exam, giving you enough time to retake for a higher score it in the spring, if needed, or you can prep through fall and target that spring test. Even if you studied all summer, fall is the ideal time to review and cram down to the last minute. And no matter how you tend to learn, an app can probably help. Here are some of the best ones available on iOS and Android (some are available on a browser, too).

Try Khan Academy if you’re a long-term learner

Khan Academy in browsr

Credit: Khan Academy

Khan Academy, a nonprofit organization and partner of the College Board, has become synonymous with test prep. They have free courses in various AP classes, a variety of subjects, and, of course, standardized tests like the SAT and LSAT—which means if you start with Khan while you prepare for the SAT, you can stick with it all the way through wherever your educational journey takes you.

Beyond having a deep selection of study materials, Khan Academy serves up information in video form, with clips that go through practice problems similar to the ones you could face on your exam. For real-deal practice questions, you’ll need to use the desktop version of the site, but the app-based videos are great to take on the go.

What I like about Khan is that some of the videos and articles are informational. For instance, you can read about calculator policies for the SAT or watch a quick clip that gives you an overview of what the test is and what to expect. Studying material is one thing, but being prepared for the experience is another, and this app is well-rounded there.

Use Magoosh’s SAT app for customized prep

Magoosh SAT in iOS

Credit: Magoosh

Magoosh flashcards and practice quizzes go over English and math concepts you should know for your test. Out of all the apps, the Practice & Prep offering is unique because it’s dedicated purely to the SAT, but it is customizable. The first time you log in, you’re prompted to share when your test is so the app can configure what you should study between now and then. There will be a difference in how you approach it if you have one month or one year to get ready and Magoosh’s app knows that.

Like Khan Academy, this platform gives you information on the test itself, too, offering up a landing page of articles on how to prepare. Beyond that, you get practice questions, videos on the reading and writing sections, and practice tests. While flashcards and study games are useful, practice quizzes are pretty crucial, too, because they give you a better sense of how you’ll perform when you’re facing down a large volume of content.

Bear in mind there are two apps from this company: I like the Practice & Prep, obviously, because it’s so customizable and helpful with the quizzes, but there is a separate flashcard app available if you learn better that way and want to double up on the methods you use for studying.

Use Varsity Tutors’ SAT: Practice, Prep, Flashcards if you want the most variety

Varsity Tutors SAT in iOS

Credit: Varsity Tutors

Varsity Tutors is another well-known name in the studying space, and the company’s SAT app is thorough. When you log in, you have the option to take a diagnostic test to see where you’re struggling, run through a practice test, or complete flashcards and other study methods designated by concept.

The underlying goal of Varsity Tutors’ app is to funnel you into working with a paid tutor, so be advised there, but the tests you can take to prepare for English and math are robust. You get a breakdown of your correct and incorrect answers, plus details on how long it took you to answer questions compared to others studying the same thing.

Use Brainscape for a trusted resource

Brainscape in iOS

Credit: Brainscape

I love the Brainscape app and use it to study for certification exams or just to learn new things. The beauty of Brainscape is that while it’s a flashcard app and those are a dime a dozen, it has some legitimacy attached to it because the company works directly with the governing bodies that oversee tests when it creates flashcard decks. AP tests, certification exams, and the SAT are just a few of the options you can study with the knowledge that the questions you’re reviewing are actually relevant to the test. Like other apps, Brainscape has an option for reviewing user-generated flashcard decks, too, and that’s great—but start with the deck that’s been created with the SAT organization itself.

Crucially, Brainscape uses a version of the Leitner method to quiz you. When you finish answering a flashcard, you indicate how well you knew the answer on a scale of one to five. That determines how often that same card is shown to you, with the lesser-known cards cropping up more frequently and the better-mastered cards popping up less often— it forces you to study more effectively, which is a winning strategy.

Use NotebookLM to shake things up

NotebookLM in browser

Credit: Google

Finally, if you’re a student or learner of any kind, not just an SAT-prepper, I recommend Google’s NotebookLM AI tool. It’s like any other AI chatbot except that it doesn’t pull its responses from the Internet. Instead, it relies only on information you feed it. If you have SAT prep tests or study materials from school, a tutor, a guidance counselor, or online, you can upload them into NotebookLM and ask the software to generate a practice quiz, flashcards, summary, or even a “podcast” that features two voices discussing the content. No matter how you learn best, NotebookLM has a feature to support you.

Importantly, it only uses the materials you upload, like I said. This means you won’t get any random or incorrect content from the far reaches of the Internet; you’ll only get information you select and input. ChatGPT gets things wrong all the time (and I have seen it generate complete nonsense when dealing with people I tutor in writing), so this is a welcome resource if you like using AI but are worried about being misled. It’s available on iOS, Android, and your desktop browser.

Kevin Durant opens up about why he feels comfortable with Rockets as potential last stop

HOUSTON — One of the final questions posed to Kevin Durant on Monday afternoon was simplistic in nature, an inquiry about legacy.

If anything, it presented an opportunity for the 37-year-old to wax poetic about one of the most decorated individual careers in NBA history — two Larry O’Brien trophies, two Finals MVPs, four Olympic medals, a regular-season MVP and two decades worth of pure, unadulterated scoring prowess.

Instead, the question caught Durant by surprise. The newest member of the Houston Rockets paused at the podium before repositioning the microphone in front of him.

Earlier in Durant’s career, there was a time when personal success was a dominating factor — teaming up with fellow esteemed colleagues like Steph Curry and Kyrie Irving in pursuit of a championship. But as the sun sets, it’s become evident that there are more important aspects to basketball than wins and losses, especially as it pertains to Durant.

[Get more Rockets news: Houston team feed]

“The definition of [legacy] has gotten confusing over the last few years to me,” Durant said during his media-day availability. “It’s always about impacting and building good relationships within the organization. From the outside looking in, every place that I’ve been may have been a tough breakup. But behind the scenes, I’ve built so many great relationships with people, lifelong friendships that have been formed. Looking forward to building upon that every single day. 

“Those relationships you build from a human level are the most important and impactful things throughout this journey in the NBA.”

An introspective Durant admitted that his departure from Phoenix this past offseason was sudden and unexpected, all while understanding the business of the NBA and what that umbrella entails. His sheer body of work alone made him one of the most coveted players on the market, with his offensive ability a desired addition to 29 other teams. But the next, and possibly final, stop of Durant’s career wouldn’t simply be which team he felt was best positioned to play deep into May and June. Durant’s thought process boiled down to being content — which explains why he publicly declared his intent on signing an extension in Houston.

“I just thought about who I was comfortable with, which coaching staff would just let me be me and understand what I bring to the table,” Durant said. “Ime [Udoka] has always been one of those guys that understood my mentality and approach to the game. He always respected that and gave me my space to be me.”

The prevalent theme of Rockets media day, from interviews with key players as well as Udoka, was admiration of Durant’s routine and mental process, from afar in years past to up close in person as he’s gotten acclimated to his new team and surroundings. Durant’s unique approach to his offseason workouts and skill development has long been one of the NBA’s underlying joys and a template for hundreds of players to emulate — and young, emerging stars like Amen Thompson and Alperen Şengün will benefit.

[Yahoo Sports TV is here! Watch live shows and highlights 24/7]

“I just enjoy competing against myself every day,” Durant said. “As you get older, you dive into the details of your life and become detail-oriented, it’s just nerdy and fun to be in that mode. My peaceful place is when I’m perfecting my craft.”

“Just a continued elevation of our group and expectations,” Udoka added. “What he does as far as professionalism, his work ethic and things I’ve seen when I coached him really rub off on a team and it has already. Kevin takes it to another level and you understand why he is, who he is and how he got to that level, what he does every day. Our young guys working with him and being around him will pay dividends for our team.”

Durant’s addition comes at a pivotal moment for a Rockets franchise searching for immediate direction after starting point guard Fred VanVleet suffered a torn right ACL recently, likely ruling him out for the 2025-26 regular season. But aside from Durant’s elite scoring ability — his floor spacing is desperately needed on a meh halfcourt execution team — his creation talent, which often goes underappreciated, will be relied upon by Udoka and the coaching staff. Thompson, Şengün and second-year guard Reed Sheppard will help in that regard, but Durant may assume the bulk of those responsibilities.

Udoka alluded to a non-traditional halfcourt setup in the wake of VanVleet’s absence, citing the versatility of the collective to shore up natural deficiencies. According to Cleaning the Glass, Durant has ranked in the 88th percentile or better for the last 15 years in both usage rate and assist percentage. Durant, who has averaged a shade over four assists in his career, is ready for a committee solution.

“I think playmaking is a team thing,” Durant said. “As many plays as we make for each other, sometimes you don’t always get the assist. Sometimes you don’t even touch the ball and you can create a play for your teammates. So if we play together, if we play off each other, move our bodies and the ball, I think we can showcase our playmaking talents. We have high IQ guys on the team that know how to play, so now we have to figure out what’s the best way to mesh on the floor and start executing from Day 1.”

For all the aforementioned benefits the Rockets will receive from Durant’s offensive presence, the defense, Houston’s cultural bedrock, has the potential to be just as successful as last season — if not more. The ever-stoic Udoka couldn’t help but crack an evil grin as he imagined some of Houston’s jumbo lineups he could deploy with Durant and fellow new addition Dorian Finney-Smith, alongside names like Jabari Smith Jr., Tari Eason and Thompson. Durant’s length and size should mesh seamlessly with an aggressive Rockets defense designed to cause chaos and that can toggle between various zones and blitzes.

Training camp, which opens this week in Houston, will be the latest crash course for a team faced with championship expectations. The majority of eyes will be on the Oklahoma City Thunder and Denver Nuggets in the West, two teams well-versed in depth and versatility, but Durant’s travels have shown him what it truly takes to reach the promised land. The Rockets will lean on him heavily for guidance and, with some luck from the basketball gods and a clean bill of health, there’s enough meat on the bones to make a serious run.

“You just put your head down and work every single day,” Durant said. “But the formula over the last few years is to have size, guys that can penetrate, guys that can create extra possessions for you, guys that can switch and guard multiple positions, length, athleticism, discipline, effort every single night from a scheme perspective — and camaraderie and continuity. 

“I feel like we have bits and pieces of all of those attributes now, it’s about how we cook it all up, come together and form who we want to be in our identity as we go forward. And that may take time, but putting in the work and trying to figure it out is the fun part.”

Lifehacker Deals Live Blog: The Best Deals We’ve Found, All in One Place

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With this live blog, you can keep up with the best deals the Lifehacker team finds every day, all in one place. Bookmark this page to keep an eye on what we’re finding. As always, we use price-tracking tools to suss out the deals that are actually worth paying attention to, not just hype designed to instill a false sense of urgency.

Twins dismiss longtime manager Rocco Baldelli after missing playoffs for a second straight season

The Minnesota Twins announced Monday that they have dismissed manager Rocco Baldelli following a disappointing season that featured a trade-deadline selloff and missing the playoffs. 

The team announced the decision via a statement from president of baseball operations Derek Falvey. 

“The game is ultimately measured by results, and over the past two seasons we did not reach the goals we set,” the statement reads. “I take personal responsibility for that. After discussions with ownership, we determined that this is the right moment for a change in voice and direction.”

[Yahoo Sports TV is here! Watch live shows and highlights 24/7]

A former MLB player with the Rays, Baldelli joined the Twins for his first MLB managerial job in 2019. He held the position for seven seasons. The Twins won 101 games in his first season and secured the first of three AL Central titles under his leadership.

But the Twins never advanced beyond the ALDS under Baldelli. And they missed the playoffs the past two seasons, with fourth-place finishes in the division. 

Rocco Baldelli is out as manager of the Minnesota Twins.
Stephen Maturen via Getty Images

There was hope in Minnesota for a rebound and return to the playoffs this year after the team missed the postseason in 2024. Instead, the Twins finished 70-92 and were eliminated from the playoffs long before Sunday’s regular-season finale.

The Twins punted on the season at the trade deadline, with a roster breakdown after they approached the deadline on the border of acting as buyers or sellers.

The news of Baldelli’s dismissal arrives weeks after the Twins announced that the ownership group led by brothers Jim, Bill and Bob Pohlad will retain controlling ownership of the franchise. 

A search for a new manager is underway, per the Twins. Falvey, general manager Jeremy Zoll and whoever is hired as the new manager will put together the team’s next coaching staff.

Twins dismiss longtime manager Rocco Baldelli after missing playoffs for a second straight season

The Minnesota Twins announced Monday that they have dismissed manager Rocco Baldelli following a disappointing season that featured a trade-deadline selloff and missing the playoffs. 

The team announced the decision via a statement from president of baseball operations Derek Falvey. 

“The game is ultimately measured by results, and over the past two seasons we did not reach the goals we set,” the statement reads. “I take personal responsibility for that. After discussions with ownership, we determined that this is the right moment for a change in voice and direction.”

[Yahoo Sports TV is here! Watch live shows and highlights 24/7]

A former MLB player with the Rays, Baldelli joined the Twins for his first MLB managerial job in 2019. He held the position for seven seasons. The Twins won 101 games in his first season and secured the first of three AL Central titles under his leadership.

But the Twins never advanced beyond the ALDS under Baldelli. And they missed the playoffs the past two seasons, with fourth-place finishes in the division. 

Rocco Baldelli is out as manager of the Minnesota Twins.
Stephen Maturen via Getty Images

There was hope in Minnesota for a rebound and return to the playoffs this year after the team missed the postseason in 2024. Instead, the Twins finished 70-92 and were eliminated from the playoffs long before Sunday’s regular-season finale.

The Twins punted on the season at the trade deadline, with a roster breakdown after they approached the deadline on the border of acting as buyers or sellers.

The news of Baldelli’s dismissal arrives weeks after the Twins announced that the ownership group led by brothers Jim, Bill and Bob Pohlad will retain controlling ownership of the franchise. 

A search for a new manager is underway, per the Twins. Falvey, general manager Jeremy Zoll and whoever is hired as the new manager will put together the team’s next coaching staff.

This Small Change in iOS 26 Makes Group Chats Way Better

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When you install a major update like iOS 26, you find yourself discovering things the more you use it. You might find a new way to boost your battery life, or stop those spam calls and texts for good. For me, however, one of my favorite discoveries was a small but excellent change to group chats—which doubles as a way to discover which of your contacts have also updated to iOS 26.

Typing indicators join the group chat

Once people update their iPhones to iOS 26, group chats start supporting typing indicators, or, in other words, those tiny typing bubbles you see in one-on-one chats in Messages. The first time you’re in a group chat after updating your iPhone and see someone typing, it’s a bit jarring, since that feature has been exclusive to single chats for all of iMessage history. To me, it almost seemed like a glitch—that’s not supposed to happen.

But it’s actually a great update. Now, group chats aren’t just dead air in-between messages: You can tell when other people are working on responses to one of your messages, so you won’t be surprised the next time a host of new texts start flooding in. On the flip side, if you don’t see these chat bubbles, you’ll know no one is actually working on anything to say. Dead air means dead air.

What’s interesting, though, is that since you need to be running iOS 26 in order to get typing indicators, this new feature serves as a bit of a tell to know which of your contacts has updated to the latest OS. That’s what I’m finding after a couple weeks of iOS 26: I’ll be in group chats where messages come in without warning, as per usual, but one contact will appear as a typing bubble. I’m sure someday not that long from now, that won’t be the norm, and I’ll see most contacts typing in group texts. But for now, it’s a neat observation.

Just remember: If you’re running iOS 26, anyone else running iOS 26 can see that you’re typing in the group chat. It might require some new muscle memory. Until now, you’ve been able to take as long as you want to type and send messages in group chats without notice. But now, some (if not all) of the chat members will be able to see when you start crafting a text.

This is far from the only change Apple made to messaging in iOS 26. In fact, there’s a lot new here, including chat background, the ability to copy individual words from messages, and polls like you might find on other chat apps and social media platforms.