Alex Rodriguez is single again.
The former Yankees slugger has split with Texas-based Kathryne “Kat” Padgett, sources exclusively tell us.
An insider says the duo are still friendly. “They’re good friends – they’re all just single. They’re broken up, but they’re super tight. It’s all right.”
A source says that since the split, “Alex is having fun and hanging out with his family.”
He was seen Saturday at a University of Miami football game with one of his daughters. A-Rod also hinted that he’s now solo when he posted a photo of a meal in front of a TV on Instagram Stories this weekend with the caption, “Dinner for one… Yankees game.”
A spy said Padgett has been “noticeably absent” from A-Rod’s assignments lately. “They broke up but remain good friends,” said a source. “He’s focused on his family and his businesses.”
Rodriguez, 47, and Padgett, 25, were first seen together in January at a Green Bay Packers football game and became a co-owner shortly after watching the Minnesota Timberwolves, the NBA team that A-Rod co-owns.
More recently, the former MLB star and fitness competitor was spotted on a yacht in Italy in June, as well as vacationing in Ibiza, Spain, with Rodriguez’ friends Eric Decker and Jessie James Decker.
But sources have always said that the relationship between A-Rod and Padgett was not serious. An insider previously told Vidak For Congress: “Kathryne is a great girl, but they are not serious. They are just dating. They’re having fun, that’s all.
Padgett was the first woman to date Rodriguez in public after his 2021 split with ex-fiancée Jennifer Lopez – who went on to marry her own ex-fiancée, Ben Affleck.
Rodriguez, who is also a broadcaster for ESPN’s “Sunday Night Baseball” and for FOX Sports, was at the game in Miami to watch his team win their season opener.
He serves on the school’s board of trustees and has also established an eponymous annual scholarship fund that has been given to 40 students to date and aims to pump 100 more through the school. A Miami business school courtyard is also named after him, and he helped renovate the university’s baseball stadium.
Rodriguez himself once accepted a football scholarship from the University of Miami — but he never attended the school, signing instead with the Seattle Mariners as the No. 1 MLB draft.