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The Washington Capitals announced Friday that the team and coach Peter Laviolette have agreed to part ways after three seasons.

Laviolette, whose contract expires on June 30, had been hired in 2020 to give the Capitals experience behind the bench after the unsuccessful Todd Reirden tenure. Reirden, who had been promoted to his first NHL head coaching job after Barry Trotz’s departure, was fired after two seasons of first-round exits.

Laviolette is a former Stanley Cup winner who leads U.S.-born coaches with 752 wins. But he wasn’t able to find success with the Capitals, even with a strong core of No. 2 overall goal scorer Alex Ovechkin, Nicklas Backstrom, John Carlson, Tom Wilson, T.J. Oshie and Evgeny Kuznetsov that had won the Stanley Cup in 2018 under Trotz.

The Capitals finished second and fourth in the division and were ousted in the first round during his first two seasons. This season, their eight-season playoff streak came to an end, even though they had changed up their goaltending by signing Stanley Cup winner Darcy Kuemper.

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There were circumstances beyond Laviolette’s control. Backstrom and Wilson didn’t play until January because of offseason surgeries. Carlson missed nearly two months after getting hit in the head with a puck. Oshie was out three separate times and Ovechkin missed time because of his father’s death and assorted injuries.

General manager Brian MacLellan, amid a losing streak, moved out Dmitry Orlov, Garnet Hathaway, Marcus Johansson, Erik Gustafsson and Lars Eller at the trade deadline in a bid to get younger.

The Capitals were officially eliminated from the playoffs on April 4. Laviolette finishes his Capitals tenure with a 115-78-27 record.

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DeMar DeRozan’s daughter, Diar, went viral Wednesday night with her piercing screams that appeared to have a real impact on the Raptors’ free-throw shooting during the Chicago Bulls’ play-in game victory in Toronto. 

Apparently, some fans were so incensed by the 9-year-old’s actions that she became the target of ‘severe online threats,’ TNT’s Chris Haynes reported. Haynes said the NBA made the Bulls aware of the threats, and team security escorted her out of Scotiabank Arena and to the team bus alongside DeRozan.   

‘As long as she was there with her father, I wasn’t worried about anything happening,’ DeRozan told Haynes. ‘It was just a precautionary measure and I appreciate that.’ 

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The Raptors season came to end with a 109-105 loss to the Bulls in the 9 vs. 10 play-in game. Toronto shot a dismal 18-for-36 from the free throw line, a 50% mark that many credited Diar for helping make happen. 

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The ‘race’ to the bottom and the best draft lottery odds to select generational talent Connor Bedard is over.

After the San Jose Sharks, Columbus Blue Jackets, Chicago Blackhawks and Anaheim Ducks had held the 32nd overall spot at times since March 26, the slumping Ducks clinched the best odds on Thursday when their season-ending streak hit 13 games. They’re followed by the Blue Jackets, Blackhawks, Sharks and Montreal Canadiens.

The draft lottery winner can move up only 10 spots this year, so the bottom 11 teams have a shot at Bedard. Here’s a look at the teams with the best odds:

Why is Connor Bedard a generational talent?

Bedard, who entered the Western Hockey League draft early as a 15-year-old, has put up big numbers while playing against older players. He has an elite-level shot and topped North American skaters in Central Scouting’s midseason rankings. The 17-year-old was named world junior championships MVP after getting 23 points in seven games for gold medalist Canada. The Regina (Saskatchewan) Pats’ 5-10, 185-pound center finished the regular season with a league-best 71 goals and 143 points in 57 games. He had 20 points in seven games as the Pats lost to the Saskatoon Blades in the first round of the WHL playoffs.

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Who will get the first pick in NHL draft 2023?

Here are the NHL draft lottery odds for the 11 teams eligible to move up to the top pick:

Anaheim Ducks – 82 GP, 23-47-12,  58 pts., .354. Odds: 25.5%*Columbus Blue Jackets – 82 GP, 25-48-9,  59 pts., .360. Odds: 13.5%Chicago Blackhawks – 82 GP, 26-49-7,  59 pts., .360. Odds: 11.5%San Jose Sharks – 82 GP, 22-44-16,  60 pts., .366. Odds: 9.5%Montreal Canadiens – 82 GP, 31-45-6, 68 pts., .415. Odds: 8.5%Arizona Coyotes – 82 GP, 28-40-14, 70 pts., .426. Odds: 7.5%Philadelphia Flyers – 82 GP, 31-38-13,  75 pts., .457. Odds: 6.5%Washington Capitals – 82 GP, 35-37-10, 80 pts., .488. Odds: 6.0%Detroit Red Wings – 82 GP, 35-37-10, 80 pts., .488. Odds: 5.0%St. Louis Blues – 82 GP, 37-38-7,  81 pts., .494. Odds: 3.5%Vancouver Canucks – 82 GP, 38-37-7,  83 pts.,  506. Odds: 3.0%

*-18.5% outright, plus they’d retain the pick if a team in the 12 to 16 range wins the lottery.

Draft lottery odds for remaining non-playoff teams

Ottawa Senators – 2.5%.Buffalo Sabres – 2.0%.Pittsburgh Penguins – 1.5%.Nashville Predators – 0.5%.Calgary Flames – 0.5%

Note: Ottawa traded its first-round pick to the Coyotes. If the pick ends up in the top five, the Senators retain the pick and Arizona gets Ottawa’s 2024 first-rounder.

How the bottom five teams got there

Anaheim – The Ducks brought in veterans this season to help the young core, but the team underperformed, got off to a 1-6-1 start and struggled defensively. They finished second to last in power play and penalty kill and had the worst goal differential. Coach Dallas Eakins was let go after the season.

Columbus – They signed top free agent Johnny Gaudreau, but injuries crushed their hopes. No. 1 defenseman Zach Werenski suffered a season-ending shoulder injury early in the season and Jakub Voracek also went out for the season. Patrik Laine missed time with injuries on four separate occasions and there were plenty of others. They moved out of last place on the second-to-last day when Gaudreau scored an overtime goal. Coach Brad Larsen was fired after the season.

Chicago – They were the definition of organizational tank. They dealt Alex DeBrincat and Kirby Dach in the offseason and didn’t qualify Dylan Strome and Dominik Kubalik. They traded Patrick Kane, Max Domi, Jake McCabe and other others at the deadline. Captain Jonathan Toews missed two months with illness and the team said it wouldn’t re-sign him this summer. They picked up three points in the final two games to move out of last.

San Jose – GM Mike Grier moved Brent Burns in the offseason, which allowed a healthy Erik Karlsson to have a special season. Grier was a seller at the deadline, trading Timo Meier and others. A three-game winning streak from March 28-April 1 moved them out of last place, though they finished with a six-game losing streak.

Montreal – They finished last overall in 2021-22, so this season was an improvement. But like Columbus, injuries crushed the Canadiens, including to Cole Caufield, Sean Monahan, No. 1 overall pick Juraj Slafkovsky and others.

How does the NHL draft lottery work?

The draft lottery is scheduled to be held at 7 p.m. ET on May 8 and will be shown on ESPN. There are two drawings, first for a chance at the top pick and then for a chance at the second pick. University of Michigan forward Adam Fantilli, who’s 6-2, 195, could go No. 2 overall. Swedish forward Leo Carlsson, who’s 6-3, 198, was Central Scouting’s top-ranked international skater in the midseason rankings.

What happened the last time there was this much excitement about a draft prospect?

That was Connor McDavid’s draft year with the Erie Otters in 2015, when he had 120 points in 47 games. The Sabres finished last with 54 points and the Coyotes had 56, but the Oilers (62) won the draft lottery and chose McDavid. The Sabres drafted Jack Eichel and the Coyotes chose Strome, both of whom have since been traded.

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As the news broke on Thursday afternoon that a record-breaking deal to sell the Washington Commanders had been reached (but not yet signed), the emotions inside the team’s headquarters could not be denied.

“Kind of relief,” Commanders coach Ron Rivera told USA TODAY Sports on Friday.

A group led by Philadelphia 76ers owner Josh Harris and including Mitchell Rales and Earvin “Magic” Johnson reached an agreement in principle to purchase the Commanders from Dan and Tanya Snyder for $6.05 billion – the highest price ever for a U.S. sports franchise – and likely end the tenure of the NFL’s most despised owner.

There’s still a window of opportunity over the next couple of days for another bidder, perhaps Canadian billionaire Steve Apostolopoulos, to top the record bid. But after weeks of drama that included the question of whether the embattled Snyder would actually sell the team, the transition appears to be imminent.

“It really seemed like a load was lifted, because everybody was on pins and needles for the last couple of months,” Rivera said, reflecting on the reaction. “You kind of wondered what was going to happen.”

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After a short break to process the development on Thursday, what happened next?

“Then we got right back to the draft meetings,” Rivera said. “We’ll still be business as usual.”

Rivera and other key members of the Commanders brain trust, including GM Martin Mayhew and president Jason Wright, have been pressed to carry on as if they are in place for the long haul, even though uncertainty is always part of the package when a new owner arrives.

Then again, as Rivera acknowledged, coaching in the NFL always comes with the urgency of trying to win now…while trying to set the table to win later, too.

“At the end of the day,” Rivera said, “you have to make the best of it right now.”

During the recent NFL league meetings in Phoenix, Mayhew insisted that the prospects of a sale had “zero impact” on the team’s offseason moves. He indicated that he wasn’t privy to details surrounding the bidding process and that he actually preferred that so as to concentrate purely on football matters.

“It’s all about putting together a good football team for 2023,” Mayhew told reporters in late March. “That’s where our focus is.”

After beating the Dallas Cowboys in their finale to close out the 2022 season at 8-8-1, the Commanders made some key moves in free agency to fortify the trenches. After initially placing the franchise tag on defensive tackle Daron Payne, they signed him to a four-year, $90 million extension. They added offensive tackle Andrew Wyllie from the Kansas City Chiefs and center Nick Gates from the New York Giants. Jacoby Brissett, a journeyman who spent last season in Cleveland, is the veteran presence at quarterback to compete with Sam Howell, the front-runner for the starting role who remains unproven as he heads into his second season.

There’s still a decision to make regarding the fifth-year option on defensive end Chase Young, but after signing defensive tackle Jonathan Allen to a four-year, $72 million extension last year, the Commanders are positioned to keep their talented defensive line together for several more years.

Also, the hire of Eric Bieniemy to run the offense also underscores urgency – for the team and for the coordinator bypassed for several head coaching jobs despite his key role on Andy Reid’s staffs with the Chiefs.

“Finishing strong against Dallas was a good tone-setter for the offseason,” said Rivera, heading into his fourth season in Washington. “We’ve tried to build off that. Free agency helped us a lot. So it’s business as usual. Hiring Eric Bieniemy reflected that. Now the draft.”

Barring a trade, Washington will pick 16th in the first round of the draft on April 27. Rivera maintains that the Commanders have the luxury of drafting the best available player.

“We don’t have to take a position,” he said. “We can take whatever players is available in our slot that can best help us. We can only control what we can control. We’ll react to what the people in front of us do in the draft.”

At least one big mystery seems to be on the verge of being resolved. After When both sides finalize terms of the sale, the deal will then be vetted by the NFL’s finance committee before being presented to the full body of owners, with 24 votes needed for approval. Presumably, the owners could be presented a deal to review at their next round of league meetings in Eagan, Minnesota, in late May.  

For Rivera and Co., it’s a different type of business as usual.

As the coach put it, “Now that they’ve come up with a deal, we can continue to do what we’ve been doing.”

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Jarrett Bell on Twitter @JarrettBell.

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DELRAY BEACH, Fla. — Tennis legend Billie Jean King finally met Coco Gauff’s grandmother on Friday.

Yvonne Odom was a leader at the women’s luncheon “Champions of Equity” at the Delray Beach Tennis Center, hours before the Billie Jean King Cup qualifier was waged between the USA and Austria.

The pioneering King, 79, now knows why Gauff is the way she is — a worldly 19-year-old top-10 tennis player with promise of greatness.

King even raised the thought of Coco becoming president one day.

“Look who’s raised her,’ King said. “I finally got to meet her grandmother. What an influence to grow up in that environment. How can you not be special? Now that I met her, I have her number, I’m going to talk to her (more) and call her. I care about civil rights, what she went through, the first child of color in Atlantic High School (then called Seacrest). I’m all over it.’

King said she recalled the speech Coco made in Delray Beach in June 2020 during the Black Lives Matter protests, and it all made sense.

“I listened to that and I go, ‘She’s the best,’ ‘ King said. “Can you imagine if she were No. 1? Holy cannoli, what she could accomplish. The world’s open to her. Why not be the president of the United States? Whatever she wants. She’s had a good background, good people around her.

“The grandmother has heart, she’s a force. I asked Grandmother if she wrote that (speech). She said, ‘No, that’s hers.’ ‘

Gauff, the Delray Beach, Florida, resident, played the first singles match Friday night against Austria’s top player, Julia Grabher, and prevailed 6-1, 6-3 to give the USA a 1-0 lead. Gauff’s doubles partner, Jessica Pegula beat Sinja Kraus 6-0, 7-5 in the second match of the night. Gauff is ranked sixth in the world and Pegula is third.

‘(Coco) is really special,’ King said. “Depends what she does with it. She still needs to improve her game. Let’s see where it goes.’

In a 30-minute presser, King addressed several topics including the U.S. Open’s decision to commemorate the 50th anniversary of equal prize money at the Queens Grand Slam and the potential of winning a Congressional Gold Medal.

King addresses Florida’s ‘Don’t Say Gay’ law

Being in Florida, King, one of the first athletes to acknowledge herself as gay, also commented on the state’s controversial law that prohibits classroom discussion about sexual orientation or gender identity up to the third grade or in a specified manner.

King took aim at the law known by its critics as ‘Don’t Say Gay’ as well as Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who signed the bill that became law on July 1, 2022.

King showed off her multicolored watch and said: “We must be bothering him. I have my rainbow watch on today.’

‘I think it’s sad,’ King added. “I’m very big on inclusion, everybody being their authentic self. If you heard my personal journey, which I thought I was straight, I realized later in life I wasn’t. I had to figure out who am I, who is my authentic self. Going through that journey just for me personally, the important thing is to be welcoming to everyone.’

DeSantis’ latest push is extending the law to include all grades.

“I have no control over what the governor is doing,’ King said. “He probably has gay kids in his family. He’ll say he doesn’t probably, but I bet he does. Most people have gay relatives, even if they don’t know it.

“I’m about inclusion. I think you should have different people on the (school) board. Shouldn’t just be the people like you, that look like you, think like you. I think it’s important to have people who think differently. That’s how you really win. You get great ideas from so many different sources in life. It’s really important to be open I think to people.’

U.S. Open celebrates 50 years of equality

The U.S. Open will have a series of celebrations in August to honor its decision in 1973 to have equal prize money for men and women. It wasn’t until 2007 that all four majors had equal prize money.

“We’re not even close,’ King said in terms of sports equality. ‘Forty percent of professional athletes are women. We are up to a whopping 5 percent in the media. Media rights is where all the money is, The women in college, NCAA, they always throw it for nothing. Like, if you make the deal for the guys, oh, we’ll give you the women, too. ‘Give.’ It’s the mindset we’re not worth anything. We have to make ourselves worth something.’

Because of King’s push for equal prize money back in the 1970s, the USTA wants to get King recognized with a Congressional Gold Medal.

“That would be an amazing gift to me personally,’ King said.

King received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor, from President Barack Obama in 2009.

As for the international competition, if USA beats Austria, it moves on to the 12-country finals in November. Coached by Kathy Rinaldi, Gauff, Pegula, Danielle Collins, Caty McNally and Sofia Kenin represent the USA.

“I think the American team — how can they not win if they play their best?’ King said. “Jessica, Coco, Danielle, Caty and Sofia, They’re the best players in the world. And the best thing, they get along great.’

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Another star could be on his way out of Arizona.

Cardinals safety Budda Baker has requested a trade, a person with knowledge of the situation told USA TODAY Sports. The person spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the matter.

Baker was originally a second round pick by the Cardinals in 2017. He’s spent his entire career in Arizona and is regarded as one of the best safeties in the NFL.

Baker is a two-time first team All-Pro and five-time Pro Bowler. The defensive back has amassed 650 tackles, 34 pass deflections, seven interceptions and six forced fumbles in 93 career games, all in a Cardinals uniform.

The 27-year-old signed a contract extension with the Cardinals in 2020. He’s signed through the 2024 season. 

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NFL DRAFT HUB: Latest NFL Draft mock drafts, news, live picks, grades and analysis 

Baker is not the only big-name player to leave the desert this offseason. Future Hall of Famer J.J. Watt retired and standout wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins is rumored to be on his way out of Arizona. 

All this comes after the firing of head coach Kliff Kingsbury. He was replaced by a first-time head coach in Jonathan Gannon.

Possible destinations for Budda Baker

► Chicago Bears

The Bears have the most salary cap space in the NFL with $35.8 million available, per Over The Cap. Bears general manager Ryan Poles has shown a willingness to go aggresively after players this offseason. 

► Philadelphia Eagles

The Eagles lost versatile safety C.J. Gardner-Johnson in free agency. Baker would fill the void and be an upgrade in Philly’s defensive backfield. 

► New England Patriots 

Long-time Patriots safety Devin McCourty retired this offseason. Baker would be an adequate replacement in the defensive backfield and a leader on the New England defense. 

► Indianapolis Colts

The Colts have $22.4 million in salary cap space, per Over The Cap. Indianapolis could use a playmaker and a veteran leader in its defensive backfield after trading cornerback Stephon Gilmore to the Dallas Cowboys. 

Follow USA TODAY Sports’ Tyler Dragon on Twitter @TheTylerDragon.

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The ‘Lars bar’ didn’t last long. 

Two years after stating that Brad Larsen, nicknamed ‘Lars,’ had set the bar too high for other candidates in their search for John Tortorella’s replacement, the Columbus Blue Jackets fired him Saturday as head coach with one contract year remaining. The team also announced that goaltending coach Manny Legace’s contract wouldn’t be renewed. 

The remaining staff, including associate head coach Pascal Vincent, assistant Steve McCarthy and skills coaches Kenny McCudden and Jared Boll, are staying.

Larsen, 45, finished his first head coaching stint with a 62-86-16 record in 164 games. Both seasons were marred by injuries that limited key players for long stretches, including Patrik Laine and Boone Jenner in each one.

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This season, the Blue Jackets set injury-related franchise records in man-games lost (563), goaltenders used (six) and players who suited up for at least a game (47). For that reason, general manager Jarmo Kekalainen made sure to note to the Columbus Dispatch on Friday that wins and losses wouldn’t be factored into the assessment of Larsen’s coaching during a nightmarish 25-48-9 season. 

‘This season has been extremely disappointing and the responsibility for that lies with all of us,’ said Kekalainen in a statement. ‘These decisions were difficult and not made lightly given our respect for both Brad and Manny as coaches and people. Brad has been part of our organization for more than a decade, and we are extremely thankful for his hard work and many contributions – both on and off the ice – during that time. We wish nothing but the best for Brad and his family in the future.’

Kekalainen said other criteria were used, including his own observations from training camp workouts, practices and games.

Larsen played parts of eight NHL seasons for the Colorado Avalanche and Atlanta Thrashers before starting his coaching career with the Blue Jackets in 2010-11 as an AHL assistant with the Springfield Falcons. After two years in that role, he took over the Springfield head coaching role for two seasons before moving up to Columbus as a Blue Jackets assistant in 2014-15 under former coach Todd Richards.

Tortorella took the reins after the Jackets’ 0-7-0 start in 2015-16 led to a coaching shift away from Richards. Larsen remained on Tortorella’s staff for all six years of that coaching era in Columbus before replacing his mentor June 11, 2021 as the Blue Jackets next head coach.

Less than a month into his new role, Larsen and the rest of the organization was shaken by the tragic fireworks-related death of rookie goalie Matiss Kivlenieks on July 4, 2021 at the Novi, Michigan home of Manny Legace – the Blue Jackets’ goaltending coach. Larsen drove to Michigan the next morning to grieve with the Legace family and Blue Jackets goalie Elvis Merzlikins. 

Two months later, his tenure as the Blue Jackets’ top coach officially began.

It started strong with a 12-6-0 record through the first 18 games, but Laine strained an oblique muscle in the 10th game and missed 19 games dealing with that plus the death of his father in Finland. The Jackets’ good start vanished by the time he returned and it took a couple weeks for their leading goal-scorer to get back up to speed. 

Laine eventually got hot, but the Blue Jackets’ playoff hopes were on life support and faded quickly. This season, Laine was injured three separate times, including a sprained elbow in the second period of the season-opener at the Carolina Hurricanes. It turned out to be the first of many key injury losses for the Blue Jackets, who set a franchise record with 563 man-games lost.

The Blue Jackets also sustained season-ending injuries to forward Justin Danforth (shoulder surgery) after six games, veteran playmaker Jakub Voracek (concussion) after 11 games, top defenseman Zach Werenski (shoulder surgery) after 13 games and defenseman Jake Bean after 15 games.

While missing Laine and Danforth, the Blue Jackets started out 3-9-0 and were blown out in three straight games – first at the New Jersey Devils on Oct. 30 and the next two against the defending Stanley Cup champion Colorado Avalanche in Tampere, Finland. 

It essentially ended the Blue Jackets’ hopes for joining the playoff race in the Eastern Conference and a slew of injuries that followed sealed their fate. Now Kekalainen and John Davidson, the team’s president of hockey operations, are looking for Larsen’s replacement.

Among the available coaching free agents are veterans Bruce Boudreau, who was fired by the Vancouver Canucks mid-season, and Peter Laviolette – who mutually parted ways with the Washington Capitals on Friday after three seasons. 

Laviolette, 58, ranks eighth all-time and third among active NHL coaches with 752 wins in a 21-year career coaching five teams. Boudreau is 20th all-time and sixth among active coaches with 617 wins for four teams over 15 years.

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Denver Nuggets star Nikola Jokic is one step closer to joining elite company. 

The NBA announced the finalists for all the league’s regular-season awards, including the highly-debated NBA MVP award, and Jokic, Milwaukee’s Giannis Antetokounmpo and Philadelphia’s Joel Embiid are on the shortlist. That shouldn’t be a surprise to anyone. 

If Jokic were to win his third consecutive MVP, he would join Wilt Chamberlain, Bill Russell and Larry Bird as the only players in NBA history to win three straight Most Valuable Player awards. 

One thing is for certain, however: An international player will win the MVP award for the fifth season in a row, following Antetokounmpo (2019, 2020) and Jokic (2021, 2022). Embiid is going for his first MVP.

‘This is going to be the closest ever vote, in my opinion,’ Charles Barkley said after all finalists were announced on the TNT broadcast ahead of the final two play-in games.

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OPINION: Toxic discussion around this season’s NBA MVP award is taking fun out of race 

Award results are based on votes from an international panel of sportswriters and broadcasters.

Here’s all the finalists for all the regular-season awards – including rookie of the year, most improved, sixth man, defensive player of the year and clutch player of the year–followed by USA TODAY Sports pick for the winner.

MVP award

1. Giannis Antetokounmpo, Milwaukee Bucks

2. Joel Embiid, Philadelphia 76ers

3. Nikola Jokic, Denver Nuggets

Our pick: Nikola Jokic

Rookie of the Year

1. Paolo Banchero, Orlando Magic

2. Walker Kessler, Utah Jazz

3. Jalen Williams, Oklahoma City Thunder

Our pick: Paolo Banchero

Most Improved Player of the Year

1. Jalen Brunson, New York Knicks

2. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Oklahoma City Thunder

3. Lauri Markkanen, Utah Jazz

Our pick: Lauri Markkanen

Clutch Player of the Year

1. Jimmy Butler, Miami Heat

2. DeMar DeRozan, Chicago Bulls

3. De’Aaron Fox, Sacramento Kings

Our pick: De’Aaron Fox

Sixth Man of the Year

1. Malcolm Brogdon, Boston Celtics

2. Bobby Portis, Milwaukee Bucks

2. Immanuel Quickley, New York Knicks

Our pick: Malcolm Brogdon

Defensive Player of the Year

1. Jaren Jackson Jr., Memphis

2.  Brook Lopez, Milwaukee

3. Evan Mobley, Cleveland 

Our pick: Jaren Jackson, Jr.

Coach of the Year

1. Mike Brown, Sacramento Kings

2. Mark Daigneault, Oklahoma Thunder

3. Joe Mazzulla, Boston Celtics

Our pick: Mike Brown

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A George Soros-bankrolled prosecutor in St. Louis already mired in allegations of negligence and misconduct was hit with more bad news on Friday, when one of the few remaining prosecutors who handles the city’s most violent felonies abruptly resigned, citing a ‘toxic work environment.’

Natalia Ogurkiewicz, 27, joined the office of St. Louis Circuit Attorney Kimberly Gardner in 2020 and handled several murder and other felony cases. She initially planned to leave Gardner’s office at the end of the month but announced Friday she was departing early, local media reported.

In her resignation letter, Ogurkiewicz didn’t hold back in lambasting Gardner while explaining her reasons for leaving.

‘As a St. Louis resident, I have lost trust in Kim Gardner from the inside,’ wrote Ogurkiewicz. ‘I do not believe that her leadership can stop the metaphorical or physical ballistics from continuing to fly through our city.’

Gardner is one of the first prosecutors whom Soros, a liberal billionaire and Democrat mega-donor, bankrolled in 2016 and again for her re-election in 2020. She announced last month that she’ll seek a third term.

Ogurkiewicz’s departure is the latest example of persistent staffing issues that have plagued Gardner’s office, which has long been understaffed and now has just five prosecutors left to handle hundreds of violent felonies.

Gardner, who took office in 2017, had a more than 100% turnover rate for attorneys in her first two years in office and by earlier this year had about half as many attorneys on staff as when she assumed the job. The effect of the high turnover in Gardner’s office has been ‘a state of dysfunction, low morale and dearth of legal wisdom necessary to safeguard the public from potentially dangerous criminals,’ the St. Louis Post-Dispatch previously reported.

A spokeswoman for the Circuit Attorney’s Office told the Post-Dispatch that the office couldn’t speak on personal matters but ‘continues to aggressively recruit and hire attorneys and support staff to serve the people of the city of St. Louis.’

The latest resignation comes as Gardner, a Democrat, is in a legal fight to hold onto her job. Missouri Attorney General Andrew Bailey, a Republican, launched a legal process seeking to fire her, claiming the prosecutor is neglecting her duties by not enforcing the law or protecting public safety.

In her resignation letter, Ogurkiewicz said it was nearly impossible for prosecutors to keep up with the demands of an understaffed office, no matter how many hours they worked, describing an ‘untenable’ workload. Due to the staffing situation, Ogurkiewicz outlined how she had to fill several different roles and therefore spent significant time filing charges or issuing warrants rather than preparing for trials.

In 2021, Gardner came under fire after three murder cases under her purview were dismissed in one week due to prosecutors in her office not showing up for hearings or being unprepared.

More recently, St. Louis prosecutors last week dismissed and refiled charges against two men accused of killing a father and his seven-year-old daughter, likely pushing back the trial by months. According to an investigation by local CBS affiliate KMOV, the reason for the dismissal and refiling is that ‘the prosecutors weren’t ready for trial,’ which had been set to take place in a matter of days.

Dismissing and refiling cases has become increasingly common as Gardner’s understaffed office has struggled to prepare for trials, according to a Post-Dispatch analysis.

Gardner’s office seemed to blame police for having to dismiss and refile the double-murder case: ‘In this case, the CAO [Circuit Attorney’s Office] was not provided evidence in a timely manner due to acknowledged staffing challenges at the police department,’ Gardner spokeswoman Allison Hawk said in a statement.

The St. Louis Police Officers’ Association responded by lambasting Gardner’s office for trying to shift the blame. ‘Police officers shouldn’t be made scapegoats for an overworked, backlogged and mismanaged Circuit Attorney’s Office,’ the union said in a statement.

Ogurkiewicz noted the Circuit Attorney Office’s worsening relationship with St. Louis police during Gardner’s tenure has made prosecutors’ jobs more difficult, writing that ‘ongoing political and ideological conflict [with] the police department has obliterated the necessary teamwork and relationship for an agreed-upon system to exist.’

Ogurkiewicz, who has been subpoenaed in the attorney general’s lawsuit seeking Gardner’s removal, also slammed her former boss for her response to Bailey.

In February, Bailey filed a petition quo warranto, the legal mechanism under state statute that allows the attorney general to remove a prosecutor who neglects her duties. 

‘This is about a quantum of evidence that demonstrates her failure to prosecute cases, failure to inform and confer with victims in cases and failure to file new cases that are referred by law enforcement agencies,’ Bailey told Fox News Digital at the time of the filing.

He separately said in a statement that Gardner is ‘creating’ victims instead of ‘protecting’ them.

Bailey claims that nearly 12,000 criminal cases have been dismissed due to what he calls Gardner’s failures. He also says that more than 9,000 cases were thrown out as they were about to go to trial, forcing judges to dismiss more than 2,000 cases due to what Bailey described as a failure to provide defendants with evidence and speedy trials.

Gardner, who has refused to leave office amid Bailey’s probe, has called Bailey’s efforts a political witch hunt and a form of ‘voter suppression,’ suggesting that racism and sexism are behind some of the criticism against her. On Tuesday, she responded to Bailey’s allegations in a legal filing.

‘His amended petition is a gross power grab, an affront to the liberties of all Missourians and the democratic process,’ said Gardner. ‘If the attorney general or the political interests behind his petition were truly concerned about crime in St. Louis, they would seek to assist with resources.’

Gardner also blamed her subordinates for potential problems in a recent filing, an example of finger-pointing that Ogurkiewicz took issue with in her letter.

‘I will not work for a leader who makes public statements outright calling her attorneys ‘negligent’ and implying their incompetence,’ wrote Ogurkiewicz. ‘I feel like leading with integrity looks like standing by and supporting staff through all difficulties, not herding them like sheep to a media frenzy slaughter.’

A hearing is set for next week as part of Bailey’s removal effort for Gardner and members of her office to appear before a judge.

Ogurkiewicz, who worked in private practice before joining Gardner’s office, described the Circuit Attorney’s Office as a ‘toxic work environment’ where basic prosecutorial tasks weren’t getting accomplished

Last week, for example, a St. Louis judge sanctioned Gardner’s office for withholding evidence in a double-homicide case and for allowing the suspect out on bond.

‘The court finds that there have been repeated delays by the state in obtaining discovery and providing it to the defense,’ the judge wrote. ‘There has been a lack of diligence on the part of the state in following up and providing discovery to the defendant in a timely fashion. As a result of the state’s actions and lack of diligence, the court grants defendant’s second motion for sanctions.’

That same week, the attorney for a man accused of striking teenage volleyball player Janae Edmonson with his car and causing her to lose her legs entered a not-guilty plea on behalf of his client, but a judge had to print a copy of the indictment for him in court, because Daniel Riley’s attorney told the presiding judge that he had never got a copy of the indictment for his client from Gardner’s Office, so the judge printed one for him while he was in the courtroom, according to local reports.

Edmonson had been visiting St. Louis with her volleyball team. Riley, the man charged with assault, armed criminal action and operating a motor vehicle without a valid license, was out on bail awaiting trial for an armed robbery from 2020 and had violated the terms of his bond at least 50 times, according to local reports.

However, there is no record of Gardner’s office, which is responsible for monitoring compliance with bond conditions and revoking them when those terms are violated, asking for Riley’s bond to be revoked.

The case prompted Bailey to seek Gardner’s removal from office.

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Donald Trump Jr. defended beer conglomerate Anheuser-Busch on his podcast Thursday, urging listeners not to continue boycotting the company.

Trump claimed that the company was too ‘iconic’ to continue boycotting, and that the executives have learned a lesson.

‘So here’s the deal. Anheuser-Busch totally sh*t the bed with this Dylan Mulvaney thing. I’m not, though, for destroying an American, an iconic company for something like this,’ Trump Jr. said.

The beer company has faced intense criticism in recent weeks following the announcement it was partnering with transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney.

‘When I actually look into it, I’m not gonna blame the whole company for the inaction or the stupidity of someone in a marketing campaign that got woke as hell,’ Trump said of the collaboration on Thursday.

Trump cited Anheuser-Busch’s record of donating slightly more to conservative politicians than liberal ones as reason to keep buying their beer.

‘The company itself doesn’t participate in the same leftist nonsense as the other big conglomerates,’ Trump said. ‘Frankly, they don’t participate in the same woke garbage that other people in the beer industry actually do, who are significantly worse offenders when I looked into it. But if they do this again, then it’s on them! Then, screw them.’

Mulvaney, a trans activist and social media influencer who gained prominence when given an opportunity to interview President Biden about LGBTQ issues in 2022, revealed earlier this month that the beer company sent packs of Bud Light with her face printed on the cans as part of an ad for the beer company’s March Madness contest and as a way to celebrate a full year of ‘girlhood.’

Anheuser-Busch CEO Brendan Whitworth published a lengthy statement Friday, hoping to tamp down the animosity aimed at Bud Light and its parent company. 

‘We never intended to be part of a discussion that divides people. We are in the business of bringing people together over a beer,’ Whitworth said. ‘My time serving this country taught me the importance of accountability and the values upon which America was founded: freedom, hard work and respect for one another. 

He added, ‘As CEO of Anheuser-Busch, I am focused on building and protecting our remarkable history and heritage.’

The statement received criticism from both sides of the transgender issue, with social media users asking what the message was supposed to be.

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