
Leicester's fall from grace: From Premier League champions to relegation to League One
Leicester City faces relegation to League One after a tumultuous season.
New York Mets fans largely stayed home during a chilly game against the Minnesota Twins, as the team faced an 11-game losing streak. Despite low attendance, a few fans remained hopeful for a turnaround with the return of injured player Juan Soto.
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NEW YORK (AP) â Patrick Heaney, the only person in section 524 at Citi Field shortly before the start of Tuesday nightâs game between the New York Mets and Minnesota Twins, grinned as he gazed at the sea of empty seats. âYou wouldnât be here tonight if you werenât a Met fan,â Heaney said. The skidding Mets returned home Tuesday to a quieter reception than manager Carlos Mendoza and players anticipated with the club trying to snap an 11-game losing streak â the longest for the team since 2004. âTheyâre not going to be happy, thatâs not a secret,â Mendoza said. âOur fan base, theyâre going to let you know when youâre not playing well.â âItâs not going to be good, which is justifiably so â weâre not playing well whatsoever,â pitcher Sean Manaea said. âI just expect it to not be the friendliest of welcome back home.â Shortstop Francisco Lindor said following Sundayâs 2-1, 10-inning loss to the Chicago Cubs that he expected it to âget very loudâ Tuesday night. But the few thousand fans in attendance on a brisk evening in Queens â the temperature at first pitch was 46 degrees Fahrenheit (8 Celsius) â didnât get loud until the third inning, when Lindor hit a three-run homer to open the scoring and give the Mets their biggest lead since a 5-2 win over the San Francisco Giants on April 5. New York entered Tuesday hitting .200 during its skid while being outscored 62-19. The Mets didn't have slugger Juan Soto for any of that stretch, but he is expected to come off the injured list Wednesday after missing the last 16 games with a strained left quad. âI think if they can get it going today, I think the fans will rally around them,â said Josh Hudson, a Tennessee resident in town for business who was sitting in section 509 with a $15 ticket he bought on the secondary market. Heaney, a resident of Malverne on Long Island who wore a Mets hat and 2022 playoff sweatshirt, grinned as he recalled how he ended up buying a $12 ticket and heading to the game alone. âI couldnât get my wife to come,â Heaney said. âI couldnât get my kids to come. I couldnât get my friends to come. I bought one ticket, the cheapest one I could find, and Iâm going to see if I can help them turn it around.â Mendoza, in his third season as manager after six seasons on the â coaching staff, said he wouldnât mind a frosty reception because he knows how fans will react if the team fares better. âTheyâre also going to be right behind you when we flip it around,â Mendoza said. âWeâve seen that before, too, so itâs nothing new for us that have been here. We expect those guys to continue to support us, but weâve got to do better for them too. âItâs all part of it. It comes with the territory. Wouldnât want it any other way.â \\_ AP MLB:
Many Mets fans chose to stay home due to the team's poor performance, marked by an 11-game losing streak, and the chilly weather conditions.
The temperature at the Mets game was 46 degrees Fahrenheit (8 degrees Celsius) at first pitch.
Juan Soto is expected to come off the injured list on Wednesday after missing the last 16 games due to a strained left quad.

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