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The Sacramento Kings are hitting the reset button again.

According to multiple reports, the Kings and general manager Monte McNair have ‘mutually’ agreed to part ways. The news emerged shortly after the Kings were eliminated from playoff contention with a 120-106 home loss to the Dallas Mavericks in the 9-10 play-in game.

McNair was hired in September 2020 and spent five seasons in charge of the Kings. They made the playoffs once during McNair’s tenure, in 2023. That postseason appearance, which ended in a seven-game loss to the Golden State Warriors in the first round, was the first for the Kings since 2006. McNair was named Executive of the Year that season.

Overall, the Kings went 195-205 with McNair in charge.

Their just-completed 2024-25 season in particular was filled with turmoil. The Kings fired Mike Brown, the Coach of the Year in 2022-23, after a 13-18 start. They later traded star De’Aaron Fox to the San Antonio Spurs in a deal that landed them Zach LaVine.

Now, they kick off their offseason with a search for a new GM.

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No Luka, no problem — at least for now.

The No. 10 Dallas Mavericks, often criticized for their February trade that sent Luka Dončić to the Lakers, rolled through the No. 9 Sacramento Kings on Wednesday night to advance to the final game of the 2025 NBA Play-In Tournament.

In the 120-106 victory, Mavericks center Anthony Davis led his team with 27 points and nine rebounds, while DeMar DeRozan — and his 33-point performance — was practically the lone bright spot for the Kings.

The Mavericks will face the No. 8 Memphis Grizzlies on Friday, with the winner clinching the final spot in the Western Conference, and a date against the Oklahoma City Thunder, which finished with the top record (68-14) in the NBA.

The Kings are eliminated and will now continue their search for a permanent head coach after firing Mike Brown in late December.

Here are three takeaways from Wednesday night’s Kings-Mavericks play-in game:

Don’t hate on Nico Harrison just yet. His defensive vision could be special.

Going back to the Dončić trade, general manager Nico Harrison has had his own fans berate him for trading a five-time All-NBA unicorn in his prime. And while one victory in the lower bracket of the play-in, against a weaker opponent, won’t prove anything, Dallas has built an imposing front court trio of rim protectors in Anthony Davis, Dereck Lively II and backup Daniel Gafford.

They can adjust so many shots at the cup, can clog the lane and congest the mid-range. Domantas Sabonis struggled Wednesday, scoring just 11 points on 5-of-13 shooting. The Mavericks blocked eight shots and swiped nine steals.

Will that height and defense be enough to beat Memphis? That remains to be seen, but with the Grizzlies having Zach Edey, Jaren Jackson Jr. and plenty of height of their own, Dallas matches up well — especially because Ja Morant (ankle) thrives on attacking the paint.

The Kings are a flawed team. Their inability to defend the perimeter has proven lethal.

Throughout this season, the Kings often gave up monster quarters. Most often, it was because of an avalanche of 3s they allowed opponents to flush with little resistance, as they ranked dead last in defensive 3-point percentage (38.1%).

In the second quarter Wednesday night, Dallas outscored Sacramento 44-19 on eight made 3s. In fact, in the second period, the Mavericks made double the amount of 3s than they missed (four).

In particular, Klay Thompson ignited for 16 points in the second quarter, hitting all five of his attempts from the floor, four of which came from beyond the arc. But, proving how detrimental Sacramento’s perimeter defense can be, look at the play of Davis, who had struggled for most of the first half. But a pair of lazy closeouts and overcommitments on driving players led to kickouts to Davis, who put home a pair of 3s late in the quarter to extend Dallas’ lead to 23.

Davis had started the game 0-of-5 and then proceeded to score 17 points in just fewer than 10 minutes of game time — with the rash of 3s being key in the turnaround.

Mavericks role players came up big. They will need plenty more of that.

Thompson’s eruption in the second quarter was just one of the contributions from Dallas’ role players Wednesday night. Forward P.J. Washington, despite struggling from 3, delivered a steady dose of drives and mid-range jumpers, drawing fouls and getting to the line. He finished with 17 points and nine boards.

But it was the play of backup point guard Brandon Williams, who provided an efficient spark, scoring 17 points on eight shots (hitting 3-of-4 from beyond the arc) in just 18 minutes on the floor. Williams also dished five assists without a single turnover, providing that peak efficiency teams seek in bench players.

When Davis was struggling early, it was the role players who carried Dallas. And for the Mavericks to have a shot Friday against the Grizzlies — or beyond — they will need similar performances from players not named Davis.

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We have our first elimination of the 2025 NBA Play-In Tournament.

The No. 9 Chicago Bulls slogged through an unfocused, undisciplined and ineffective first half at home, falling to the No. 10 Miami Heat, 109-90.

Heat All-Star guard Tyler Herro laced his first eight shot attempts and finished with 38 points on 13-of-19 shooting to lead all players. Point guard Josh Giddey led Chicago with 25 points, but the Bulls were held to 39.8% shooting from the floor.

Miami now travels to Atlanta to face the Hawks on Friday night in an elimination game, with the winner claiming the East’s No. 8 seed and a matchup against the No. 1 Cleveland Cavaliers.

Here are three takeaways from Wednesday night’s Bulls-Heat play-in game:

Plagued all season by slow starts, Bulls dig themselves a hole too big

Chicago’s defensive intention in the first half of an elimination game was — frankly — insulting. Miami started 9-of-11 from the field and scored its first 10 points in the paint. Three of those early attempts were uncontested layups when Herro breezed through the lane.

The easy buckets, naturally, unlocked the rest of Herro’s portfolio; he scored 16 in the first quarter and made his first eight attempts, overall. Bulls players stood around, pointed fingers, did not communicate well and seemingly moved more slowly than Miami.

This has been an issue all season: Chicago tied for  22nd in first-half defensive rating (115.6) and tied for 25th in first-half net rating (-5.4). The Bulls will have all offseason to ponder a solution.

Plagued all season by incompetent second halves, Heat respond in the fourth

Miami lost an NBA-worst 15 games this season after carrying a lead into the fourth quarter. The Heat were 14-28 in clutch games. Wednesday night, they held a 24-point lead at the half and saw it evaporate to 14 after scoring only 17 points in the third quarter. It appeared inevitable that Chicago, which swept Miami in three regular season games (including a pair of fourth-quarter comebacks), would close the gap.

The Heat, though, led once again by Herro, withstood Chicago’s attempts to claw back into the game, clamping down on defense. Miami limited the Bulls to just 16 points in the fourth quarter, and just 90 overall — a season low. This against a Chicago team that averaged 121.1 points per game over its last 28.

The bad news for Miami: Cleveland — if the Heat beats the Hawks Friday — is not Chicago, and Miami would not be able to afford inefficient second halves against the NBA’s top offense.

Erik Spoelstra masterclass shows why Miami can be tough out

Regarded widely as one of the premier coaches in the NBA, Heat coach Erik Spoelstra created a decided advantage Wednesday night with his gameplan. The Bulls ranked second in pace, generating 103.61 possessions per 48 minutes. And while Miami clearly focused on getting back in transition, the Heat, perhaps unconventionally, tried to outrun the Bulls.

Miami, which ranked 27th in pace (97.08), pushed the tempo, unsettling Chicago’s defense and leading to uncontested looks. The easy buckets in turn stifled Chicago’s offense, preventing transition opportunities. At the half, Chicago had scored just four fast break points.

And then on defense, Spoelstra matched up do-it-all defender Bam Adebayo, who starts at power forward, against Bulls point guard Josh Giddey, the player who had given Miami fits. Giddey did have his 25 points, but his four assists were well below his season average of 7.2 per game.

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The NBA identified four wrong calls in its Last Two Minute Report for the Golden State Warriors-Memphis Grizzlies play-in game.

The NBA reviewed 21 total calls/non-calls from the Warriors’ 121-116 win Tuesday, which secured the No. 7 seed in the West for Golden State.

The first error the NBA identified was a non-call on Draymond Green with 1:29 to go. The NBA said Green should have been assessed a foul, which would have been his sixth, on a reach-in attempt on Scotty Pippen Jr.’s drive. Seconds later, Memphis’ Zach Edey scored a putback the NBA says should have been offensive goaltending.

With under a minute to go, the NBA says refs made the wrong call on Brandin Podziemski’s would-be block on Pippen. The report states Podziemski ‘makes contact with the ball … and any ensuing contact once the ball becomes loose is considered incidental.’ Reggie Miller noted on the TNT broadcast in real time that the Warriors did not have any challenges.

The final incorrect call came with just over 7 seconds left. With Golden State leading 117-116, Ja Morant knocked the ball away from Steph Curry. It was ruled Warriors ball, but the report says Curry touched it last and it should have been Memphis’ ball.

Memphis now needs a win at home Friday to earn the No. 8 seed in the West.

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OpenAI is in talks to pay about $3 billion to acquire Windsurf, an artificial intelligence tool for coding help, CNBC has confirmed.

Windsurf, formerly known as Codeium, competes with Cursor, another popular AI coding tool, as well as existing AI coding features from companies like Microsoft, Anthropic and OpenAI itself.

Bloomberg was first to report on the potential deal, which CNBC confirmed with a person familiar with the matter who asked to remain anonymous since the talks are ongoing.

OpenAI is rushing to stay ahead in the generative AI race, where competitors including Google, Anthropic and Elon Musk’s xAI are investing heavily and regularly rolling out new products. Late last month, OpenAI closed a $40 billion funding round, the largest on record for a private tech company, at a $300 billion valuation.

OpenAI on Wednesday released its latest AI models, o3 and o4-mini, which it said are capable of “thinking with images,” meaning they can understand and analyze a user’s sketches and diagrams, even if they’re low quality.

Should a deal take place with Windsurf, it would be by far OpenAI’s biggest acquisition. The company has made several smaller deals in the past, including the purchase last June of analytics database provider Rockset and video collaboration platform Multi. In 2023, OpenAI bought Global Illumination, which had been “leveraging AI to build creative tools, infrastructure, and digital experiences,” according to a blog post when the deal was announced. Terms weren’t disclosed for any of those transactions.

Windsurf is among the tools, alongside Cursor and Replit, that developers have flocked to in recent months to “vibe code,” a term that refers to having AI models quickly assemble code for new software. Andrej Karpathy, a former OpenAI co-founder, coined the term in a post on X in February. Earlier this month Microsoft, whose Visual Studio Code text editor is widely used among programmers, announced an Agent Mode feature with similar capability.

The startup’s investors include Founders Fund, General Catalyst, Greenoaks and Kleiner Perkins. TechCrunch reported in February that Windsurf was raising a funding round at a $2.85 billion valuation.

— CNBC’s Jordan Novet contributed to this report.

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Fox Sports and Skip Bayless are reportedly in settlement talks with a hairstylist over a harassment suit.

The network was in mediation with former hairstylist, Noushin Faraji, according to Front Office Sports.

Faraji filed a lawsuit in California against the network, former ‘Undisputed’ host Skip Bayless, current FS1 host Joy Taylor and Fox Sports executive Charlie Dixon.

“While the parties did not resolve at mediation, they are continuing to engage in settlement discussions with the mediator,” the filing said, according to Front Office Sports. “The parties believe that, to preserve resources, it would be beneficial to hold off on the Initial Status Conference pending completing settlement negotiations.”

What were the accusations against Skip Bayless?

The lawsuit also claimed former personality Bayless offered to pay Faraji for sex.

What were the accusations against Joy Taylor?

Taylor’s name is mentioned for having insulted the hairstylist on a personal and professional level.

Taylor did take some time away from Fox Sports, but has since returned as a co-host for “Speak” alongside Paul Pierce and Keyshawn Johnson. She previously served as a moderator for “Undisputed,” which also featured Bayless.

What were the accusations against Charlie Dixon?

Attorneys for both sides mediated the situation on March 10, according to the report by Front Office Sports.

Faraji alleged in the lawsuit that Dixon forcefully touched her and used his position within the company ‘to sexually harass women.’

Dixon was suspended after the accusations in February.

Julie Stewart-Binks, a former host at Fox Sports, also had sued the network and alleged that Dixon had sexually assaulted her at a hotel in 2016. Dixon had reportedly filed a response to Stewart-Binks’ allegations, saying he had no sexual or offensive contact with her, according to a report by Awful Announcing.

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Israeli troops will not leave the buffer zones in Gaza, even after the war ends, according to Israeli Defense Minister Israel Katz. 

On Wednesday, Hamas appeared to reject an Israeli-proposed ceasefire deal that would see the return of nearly a dozen hostages who have been held captive for more than 550 days. Israel resumed combat operations in the strip last month after a previous ceasefire agreement fell apart before Israel and Hamas could reach phase two.

‘Unlike in the past, the IDF is not withdrawing from areas that have been cleared and captured. The [Israeli Defense Forces] IDF will remain in the security zones as a buffer between the enemy and Israeli communities under any temporary or permanent arrangement in Gaza — just as it does in Lebanon and Syria,’ Katz said in a statement on Wednesday.  

The buffer zones that Israel established along the Gaza border make up 30% of the strip, according to the Times of Israel. The outlet also reported that Israeli troops have been working to create the Morag Corridor, which would cut off the southern city of Rafah from Khan Younis.

Hamas reportedly said that any deal that does not have ‘real guarantees for halting the war, achieving full withdrawal, lifting the blockade, and beginning reconstruction will be a political trap,’ according to Reuters.

Since it resumed operations in March, Israel has been condemned by leaders of international institutions who have called for an immediate ceasefire.

U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres said in a statement that he was ‘very concerned’ about the situation and the lack of humanitarian aid going into the strip. Katz confirmed on Wednesday that humanitarian aid was being blocked in order to put pressure on Hamas, which has been accused of stealing aid. 

Israeli U.N. Ambassador Danny Danon condemned Guterres’ statement, saying ‘The U.N. secretary-general has no problem explicitly condemning Israel’s defensive war in Gaza and unequivocally calling for a ceasefire. Yet his statements, once again, fail to mention the hostages and fail to mention Hamas, whose barbaric actions on October 7, 2023, triggered this war.’

‘This war Hamas started will not be over until all of our remaining 59 hostages are returned home from brutal captivity,’ Danon added.

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One of the top defense contractors in the United States, which has a history of pushing diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI), is facing heat over a massive government contract that critics say should be a prime target for Elon Musk’s DOGE efforts. 

The Air Force’s Sentinel program, a massive intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) project serving as the successor to the Minuteman III program ensuring the future viability of the land-based leg of America’s nuclear triad, has been mired in controversy and slowdowns as Northrop Grumman was awarded the development contract and the endeavor has gone from a $96 billion program to at least $141 billion in recent years. 

The Pentagon ordered Northrop Grumman to pause development earlier this year due to ‘evolving launch facility requirements’, Defense One reported. Air & Space Forces Magazine reported last year that the intercontinental ballistic missile program survived a Pentagon review, but it was found that the cost overrun jumped from 37% to 81%.

Northrop Grumman, which had not previously designed an ICBM, was awarded a $13 billion contract in September 2020 for full-scale development of the program to replace the Minuteman III, and the Pentagon has estimated that the total cost of developing its new ICBM program could cost up to $264 billion over the next few decades, Bloomberg reported.

The awarding of the contract was controversial in its own right, after Boeing dropped out of the bidding, claiming that the process was rigged against it, Responsible Statecraft reported. 

‘The massive expansion of costs for Northrop Grumman’s Minuteman III program is the case example for why poorly-scoped, blank check programs are a bad idea,’ a senior Republican Congressional official who works on defense policy told Fox News Digital. 

‘This is bad for national security, bad for taxpayers, and Republicans will fix this mess that Biden’s team created,’ the official added.

Questions have also been raised by some in recent years about whether the Sentinel program is even necessary, including at a Congressional Nuclear Weapons and Arms Control Working Group press conference last year, when former Democratic Congressman John Tierney said that Sentinel ‘does not add to our security’ and could ‘actually make us less safe.’

‘When will the blank checks to cover spiraling costs end?’ Tierney said. ‘The Sentinel ICBM program is just the latest in a long list of Pentagon programs that are over budget, behind schedule and of questionable utility.’

Tierney added that he believes the ‘only value’ of recent ICBM development is ‘to the defense contractors who line their fat pockets with large cost overruns at the expense of our taxpayers.’

‘It has got to stop,’ he said. 

An Air Force spokesperson told Fox News Digital that it is taking ‘deliberate’ steps to ensure that the Sentinel program is running as cost-efficiently as possible while enhancing oversight at the same time. ‘We continue to advance the engineering design and maturity of the program with Northrop Grumman, working closely with the company to drive down costs and improve schedule performance,’ the spokesperson added.

The Air Force also pointed to a previous comment from Gen. David Allvin, Air Force chief of staff, during a symposium in March that stressed the importance of the Sentinel program.

‘We own two-thirds of the triad and three-fourths of the nuclear command and control of communications,’ Allvin said. ‘We own the nuclear deterrence. So more Air Force means more nuclear deterrence…We have to have the most reliable, the most safe, the most effective nuclear deterrent. That means sentinel, yes…I believe we need more nuclear deterrence for our nation. It’s a solemn responsibility. It’s not an option.’

Amid the cost overruns and headaches from the ICBM program, Northrop Grumman adopted and promoted an agenda focused on DEI in recent years and was one of several defense contractors that have attempted to scrub their websites of DEI in the wake of the Trump administration’s pledge to rid the government of the ideology. 

Northrop Grumman’s 2023 annual report mentions DEI as ‘vital to our culture and our company’s success. Our ability to leverage the power of our diverse workforce enhances employee engagement and enables us to innovate, perform and deliver on quality, which results in value for our shareholders, customers, and employees.’

The report also touted its minority hiring practices and stated that 25% of its employees are female, 37% people of color, 18% veterans and 8% people with disabilities. 

‘Diversity Has a Home at Northrop Grumman,’ a YouTube video from ClearanceJobs says in a post that features Northrop Grumman employees discussing the diversity of the company. 

‘Northrop’s Sentinel Program is a DOGE poster child,’ a person close to the Trump administration told Fox News Digital. ‘Not only did they practice DEI, the program is ineffective, delayed, and wasting billions of taxpayer money. Musk would have a field day.’

DOGE’s cost-cutting efforts have affected essentially every area of government, including the Defense Department, which recently announced that over $580 million worth of contracts have been canceled as Democrats continue to blast the efforts and make the case that DOGE cuts are detrimental to the country.  

‘I’ve seen it with my own eyes, billions of dollars spent on pricey consulting firms, grants and NGO‘s—the self-serving bureaucrats in Washington DC have found a million different ways to rip-off the American taxpayer,’ special advisor to the United States Agency for Global Media Kari Lake told Fox News Digital. 

‘I’m working very closely with DOGE at the agency President Trump asked me to oversee. Our DOGE team is not political, they are practical. They know that it’s not practical for the U.S. government to continue spending the way it has been. Our country won’t survive unless we cut back right now, and the hard-working men and women across this country support that.’

In a statement to Fox News Digital, a spokesperson for Northrop Grumman touted recent progress in the program.

‘We continue to make substantial progress on the Sentinel Weapon System,’ the spokesperson said. ‘On March 6, we completed the missile’s stage one static fire test, the latest of many test events that validate the rocket motor’s performance and digital design. We continue to mature the design and reduce risk as we prepare for production and deployment of this essential national security capability.’

Regarding DEI, the spokesperson said, ‘We have reviewed our policies and processes and continue to take the steps necessary to ensure compliance with the orders for the work entrusted to us. Northrop Grumman is committed to our customers’ missions, delivering technologies they need to deter threats, prevail in conflicts, and strengthen national security. Underpinned by our values, we hire, promote, and pay based on merit and performance resulting in the best team to deliver for our customers.’

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A top official at the National Institutes of Health announced his abrupt retirement from the agency after 21 years, complaining about censorship under the leadership of HHS Sec. Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

NIH senior investigator Kevin Hall complained that he ‘experienced censorship’ during his investigation of ultra-processed food addiction.

‘After 21 years at my dream job, I’m very sad to announce my early retirement from the National Institutes of Health. My life’s work has been to scientifically study how our food environment affects what we eat, and how what we eat affects our physiology,’ Hall wrote in a lengthy post on social media.

‘Lately, I’ve focused on unraveling the reasons why diets high in ultra-processed food are linked to epidemic proportions of chronic diseases such as diabetes and obesity. Our research leads the world on this topic,’ he continued.

Hall said that he was initially encouraged by Kennedy’s public statements about chronic illness and problems with America’s food systems. However, he says he ‘experienced censorship in the reporting of our research because of agency concerns that it did not appear to fully support preconceived narratives of my agency’s leadership about ultra-processed food addiction.’

‘I wrote to my agency’s leadership expressing my concerns and requested time to discuss these issues, but I never received a response,’ Hall added.

The NIH did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.

Hall’s claims come days after Kennedy visited FDA employees last week and reportedly told them that ‘the Deep State is real.’

‘President Trump always talks about the Deep State, and the media, you know, disparages him and says that he’s paranoid,’ Kennedy said according to Politico, which reported it obtained an audio recording and transcript of the secretary’s remarks. ‘But the Deep State is real. And it’s not, you know, just George Soros and Bill Gates and a bunch of nefarious individuals sitting together in a room and plotting the, you know, the destruction of humanity.’

According to multiple reports, Kennedy pointed the finger at ‘institutional pressures.’

Kennedy also reportedly said the FDA had become a ‘sock puppet’ of the industries it was meant to regulate. NBC News reported that Kennedy said that this was the case with ‘every agency,’ not just the FDA.

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Former Trump national security aide and Pentagon press secretary John Ullyot reportedly will resign at the end of the week. 

His sudden departure comes after Sean Parnell took over the role of the Pentagon’s chief spokesperson in February. 

‘I made clear to Secretary [Pete] Hegseth before the inauguration that I was not interested in being number two to anyone in public affairs,’ Ullyot told Politico, reportedly adding that he had offered to help on an acting basis for two months. 

‘Last month, as that time approached, the secretary and I talked and could not come to an agreement on another good fit for me at DOD. So I informed him today that I will be leaving at the end of this week,’ Ullyot said. 

The Department of Defense did not immediately respond Thursday to a request for comment from Fox News Digital. 

During the first Trump administration, Ullyot served as the spokesperson for the National Security Council and was an assistant secretary for public and intergovernmental affairs at the Department of Veterans Affairs. 

The Marine Corps veteran also served as a senior adviser in President Donald Trump’s 2016 election campaign. 

Ullyot’s resignation will come as three Pentagon officials have been placed on administrative leave this week as part of a leak investigation. 

Colin Carroll, chief of staff to Deputy Defense Secretary Stephen Feinberg, was put on leave on Wednesday, according to Politico. 

The day before, Darin Selnick, the deputy chief of staff for Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, and Hegseth aide Dan Caldwell were removed. 

Reuters reported that Caldwell was placed on leave for an ‘unauthorized disclosure,’ as part of an investigation into leaked Pentagon documents. 

The probe was announced last month and concerned itself over ‘recent unauthorized disclosures of national security information.’ 

Fox News’ Andrea Margolis and Jennifer Griffin contributed to this report. 

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