Darryl Strawberry and Dwight Gooden thought back to what might have been, how their starry accomplishments would have been so much greater had they not succumbed to the drugs and alcohol that shattered their careers. On the day the New York Mets announced they will retire Gooden's No. 16 on April 14 and Strawberry's No. 18 on June 1, the pair held a Zoom news conference and candidly discussed their failures to resist the fame and fortune that followed the swashbuckling Mets' 1986 World Series title, leading to prison and a string of suspensions that perhaps cost them entry to baseball's Hall of Fame. “We were mentally crazy at the time, so we needed a lot help," Strawberry said Wednesday.
Hunter Biden on Thursday pleaded not guilty to felony tax charges in a federal court in California, The Associated Press reported. The nine felony and misdemeanor tax offenses allege Biden, the son of President Biden, failed to pay at least $1.4 million in federal taxes from 2016 through 2019 and tried to evade the assessment…