Suns beat the NBA-worst Kings 114-103 to sweep season series

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Jalen Green scored 20 points, Grayson Allen had 18 and the Phoenix Suns beat the NBA-worst Sacramento Kings 114-103 on Tuesday night to sweep the four-game season series.

Associated Press Phoenix Suns guard Devin Booker (1) talks with an official during the first half of an NBA basketball game against Sacramento Kings, Tuesday, March 3, 2026, in Sacramento, Calif. (AP Photo/Alan Greth) Phoenix Suns forward Oso Ighodaro (11) hangs on the rim during the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Sacramento Kings Tuesday, March 3, 2026, in Sacramento, Calif. (AP Photo/Alan Greth) Phoenix Suns guard Grayson Allen (8) drives to the basket around Sacramento Kings guard Daeqwon Plowden (29) during the first half of an NBA basketball game, Tuesday, March 3, 2026, in Sacramento, Calif. (AP Photo/Alan Greth) Phoenix Suns guard Jalen Green (4) passes the ball during the first half of an NBA basketball game against the Sacramento Kings, Tuesday, March 3, 2026, in Sacramento, Calif. (AP Photo/Alan Greth) Phoenix Suns guard Jalen Green (4) loses the ball while going to the basket against Sacramento Kings center Maxime Raynaud (42) during the first half of an NBA basketball game Tuesday, March 3, 2026, in Sacramento, Calif. (AP Photo/Alan Greth)

Suns Kings Basketball

Seventh in the West at 35-26, the Suns won their second straight and got back Devin Booker after the star guard missed four games because of a right hip injury. He scored 14 of his 17 points in the first half.

Collin Gillespie scored 17 points — hitting 5 of 8 3-pointers — and had nine assists and six rebounds. Oso Ighodaro added 14 points and 14 rebounds. Phoenix is without Dillon Brooks because of a fractured left hand.

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The Suns used a 14-0 run in the third quarter to turn a 63-62 deficit into a 76-63 lead. Royce O'Neale capped the run with consecutive 3-pointers.

Maxime Raynaud had 22 points — on 10-of-12 shooting — and 10 rebounds for Sacramento in the opener of a five-game homestand. The Kings dropped to 14-49. They are 2-3 following a franchise-worst 16-game losing streak.

Precious Achiuwa added 18 points, DeMar DeRozan had 17 and Russell Westbrook 16. Kings forward Keegan Murray missed his third straight game because of ankle injury.

Phoenix led 59-55 at the half. Ighodaro had 12 points and 10 rebounds in the half, and Achiuwa had 16 points for Sacramento.

Up next

Suns: Host Chicago on Thursday night.Kings: Host New Orleans on Thursday night.___AP NBA:https://apnews.com/hub/nba

Suns: Host Chicago on Thursday night.

Kings: Host New Orleans on Thursday night.

AP NBA:https://apnews.com/hub/nba

Suns beat the NBA-worst Kings 114-103 to sweep season series

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Jalen Green scored 20 points, Grayson Allen had 18 and the Phoenix Suns beat the NBA-worst Sacr...
Trent Perry leads UCLA to one-sided upset of No. 9 Nebraska

Trent Perry scored 20 points and UCLA earned its third home win over a Top 10 team, beating No. 9 Nebraska 72-52 in a Big Ten Conference game on Tuesday night in Los Angeles.

Field Level Media

The Bruins (20-10, 12-7 Big Ten) finished with a 16-1 record at Pauley Pavilion, their only loss in double overtime to Indiana. They also beat then-No. 4 Purdue and then-No. 10 Illinois at home.

Perry was 8 of 15 from the field and hit three of UCLA's 10 3-pointers, adding seven rebounds and four assists. Eric Dailey Jr. logged 14 points and eight rebounds for the Bruins, who are a half-game behind Purdue and Wisconsin for fifth place in the Big Ten.

Nebraska (25-5, 14-5) missed out on a chance to lock up a triple bye given to the top four teams in next week's Big Ten conference tournament. The Cornhuskers shot 38.8%, making only 5 of 24 3-point attempts, with Pryce Sandfort going 2-for-7 from outside.

Sam Hoiberg led Nebraska with 12 points but had only two assists and was 2-for-4 from the line, as the Cornhuskers were 9 of 18 on foul shots.

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The Bruins led 37-24 at halftime and built the margin to 18 with 15:18 left on consecutive baskets by Dailey. Nebraska started to find its stroke, making seven consecutive shots including a 3-pointer by Sandfort to get within 57-45 with 8:02 to go.

UCLA made only one field goal over a five-minute stretch, its lead down to 10, before getting five points on one possession. Perry hit a jumper, with Nebraska committing a foul away from the ball, giving the Bruins another chance that was cashed in by a Tyler Bilodeau 3-pointer for a 62-47 edge with 6:17 remaining.

UCLA built a nine-point lead in the first six minutes, and a pair of Xavier Booker 3-pointers put it up to 22-11 with 11:16 left in the first half. The Bruins made 10 of their first 15 shots while Nebraska didn't get its 10th field goal until more than two minutes after halftime.

The Cornhuskers got within 29-22 with 5:41 left in the first half and then made only one more basket, missing 16 of 17 shots, including the first six of the second half.

--Field Level Media

Trent Perry leads UCLA to one-sided upset of No. 9 Nebraska

Trent Perry scored 20 points and UCLA earned its third home win over a Top 10 team, beating No. 9 Nebraska 72-52 in a ...
Teyana Taylor

Teyana Taylorcaptivated netizens via her sculpted strapless dress for the 2026 Actor Awards red carpet. The dress invited positive reactions from fans, who expressed admiration in the comments, after photos of it were shared onInstagram. At the event, the actress was nominated for two awards for her performance in One Battle After Another. One of the nominations she received was Outstanding Performance by a Female Actor in a Supporting Role.

Teyana Taylor turns heads in fitted dress

Check out Teyana Taylor's strapless dress in the Instagram post below:

As seen in the photos above, The Rip actress's dress accentuates her chest through a sculpted bust. The upper portion of the outfit includes white, light brown, and gray spiral and curvy patterns. Meanwhile, the lower portion boasts a metallic shine and cascades down to the bottom. Moreover, the back of her dress includes two beige straps that are left untied, allowing it to reach the floor.

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Taylor accessorized with a white leaf-patterned necklace that circled her neck and white earrings. She also donned some makeup, including nude lipstick and thick black eyeliner.

Her look received positive reactions. "WHAT A GREAT GREAT DRESS AND EVERYTHING!" One user wrote. "ART," another added. "Oh my gosh my heart!!!" Yet another user commented.

Originally reported by Abdul Azim Naushad onMandatory

The postTeyana Taylor Makes a Lasting Impression in Bold Strapless Fit at Actor Awardsappeared first onReality Tea.

Teyana Taylor Makes a Lasting Impression in Bold Strapless Fit at Actor Awards

Teyana Taylorcaptivated netizens via her sculpted strapless dress for the 2026 Actor Awards red carpet. The dress invited positive reaction...
In Texas, Both Parties Get an Earful About Electability

Texas state representative and Democratic U.S. Senate candidate James Talarico speaks at a primary campaign event in Round Rock on March 3, 2026.
Credit - Jordan Vonderhaar—Bloomberg/Getty Images

Time

This article is part of The D.C. Brief, TIME's politics newsletter. Sign uphereto get stories like this sent to your inbox.

James Talarico, the secularist seminarianarmedwith a biblical rejoinder for what he sees as politics' sins, commanded a sizable lead Tuesday in Texas' hard-fought Democratic primary, setting up a campaign push toward November once seen as a hail mary for his party. It was the opening night of primary season in the United States, and it appeared that an argument grounded in electability this fall prevailed, or at least found open ears.

"This is a people-powered movement to take on this broken, corrupt political system. This is truly a campaign of, by, and for the people," Talarico said at campaign headquarters just after midnight and before the race was called. He had won over 53% of the estimated 80% of votes counted thus far, according to the Associated Press.

"This is proof that there is something happening in Texas. Tonight, the people of our state gave this country a little bit of a hope," he said. "And a little bit of hope is a dangerous thing."

His opponent, Rep. Jasmine Crockett, did not share that view. Despite Talarico's commanding lead, she made no movement toward a concession. Earlier in the night, the combative progressive suggested the results would not be known until Wednesday or later after the Texas Supreme Court blocked a Dallas judge who ordered polls to stay open two extra hours after complaints from voters who were turned away. "I can tell you now that people have been disenfranchised," she told supporters.

On the Republican side, things were heading toward another two bitter months of a bruising campaign between incumbent Sen. John Cornyn and challenger Ken Paxton, the hard-right and scandal-soaked state Attorney General. Neither candidate topped 50% because Rep. Wesley Hunt made it a three-way contest. That run-off is scheduled for May 26 and gives Democrats a head start in what is shaping up to be a tough and costly battle that could decide which party runs the Senate for the final two years of President Donald Trump's term.

"If he's nominated, there's a high risk that Paxton would lose the Senate seat, taking five congressional seats down with him," Cornyn said Tuesday night, continuing a months-long animus toward his foe. "Just like the primary, we have a plan to win the runoff, and we are in the process of executing it. Judgment Day is coming for Ken Paxton."

Again, electability was the core argument on that side, too.

The stakes were incredibly high as both parties confronted questions about identity, Trumpism, Texas' soul, and, yes, electability. The results may offer a preview of party posture in other primaries and head-to-head match-ups come November. On its own, though, it suggested Democrats' messy search for their path forward remains, at best, wandering. Republicans, too, are going to have a rough go of it as they struggle to figure out how to win without Trump as a vote animator.

The race drew massive interest, both on the ground and from afar. More than 1.5 million votes were cast among Democrats—more than double the numbers seen in 2022. Among Republicans, 1.3 million voters did the same, up about 30% from levels seen in 2022, according toVoteHub.

It also drew enormous warchests. A record $122 million has been spent so far, and the GOP runoff will drive the spending even higher as the contest between the establishment-favored Cornyn and the burn-it-down partisan Paxton will come with trucks of cash.

It also laid bare a choice for the GOP: the establishment-minded insider who would cross the aisle for deals or a MAGA fighter who delights in the partisan stunts. It could be a hint about what the Trump Administration may soon find in the Upper Chamber—assuming the seat stays red.

Washington Republicans had cheered on Cornyn, who just a year ago was in the mix to lead the party in the Senate and instead had to dump millions to make it this far in his attempt to win a fifth term. The conventional wisdom had been that Cornyn would be a gimme for the GOP while Paxton and his baggage—the Republicans in the state legislature impeached him—would be a drag, especially if Talarico emerged.

And emerge, he did. The campaign had been trending this way for weeks but things took a hairpin turn when CBScensoreda Talarico interview with Stephen Colbert, saying it should not do political interviews when voting was underway. Instead, Colbert posted the video online, Talarico raised millions of dollars that helped him prove he, too, could be a fighter, and voters responded.

For months, Talarico adopted a grind-it-out mentality. He showed up in GOP strongholds he was unlikely to win in a general election but where Democrats told me they had not seen a candidate show up in ages. During a weekend swing through West Texas last month, Talarico dropped off the trail long enough topreachat Lubbock's Covenant Presbyterian, where the faithful hung on every word of his 10-minute sermon.

"West Texas deserves better than it's got," the Rev. Davis Price told me after Talarico's lesson last month. "That's the work he's here to do."

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Talarico's events were packed and disparate, while Crockett favored the viral moment. It was like watching two different campaigns: one rooted in the by-the-book strategy and the other born out of a new era and style. While the pair mostly shared a progressive footing, their styles were unmistakably unique to their candidacies. But no one could say each was not authentically Texan.

In his final push, Talarico rode confidence. At his last rally on Monday, he told the Houston crowd a victory was on the horizon. "I can feel it in my bones that we are going to win this election," he said. "We are going to take back our state and we are going to take back our country."

Left unsaid: the last time a Democrat won a Senate race in Texas was 1988; Talarico was born a year later. The last Democrat who held the Senate seat in question was Lyndon Baines Johnson.

Crockett seemed to understand this was where the race was heading. On Monday, she told reporters that Democrats needed to come together in short order as soon as a winner emerged. "My message is one of unity," she said. "Because no matter which Democrat becomes the nominee, ultimately, we are not the bad guys."

But as counting was ongoing, Crockett took the stage at her headquarters to signal that unity was not in the immediate offing.

"We're not going to have election results tonight in my opinion," Crockett said as the state Supreme Court stepped in to stop extended voting hours in Dallas County—her home base and the state's second-biggest county—where confusion scrambled counting. "Unfortunately, this is what Republicans like to do. They specifically targeted Dallas County and I think we all know why. So I want you to enjoy yourselves but I won't be back tonight because I have no idea of when we're going to get results."

Meanwhile, voters remained in line as the clock neared midnight in Houston, another Crockett-friendly area. Clerks would not start counting same-day votes until polls closed, leaving a huge number of ballots on standby.

It left Talarico's campaign in a moment of paralysis, because, while they maintained the confidence through the day that they had carried for weeks, it was a tricky task to declare victory in the absence of a shared understanding of the results. Talarico's advisers understand there is work to be done to bring Crockett's base—namely, Black women—into the Democratic tent and ready to work to win in November as a joint effort. Talarico prevailed on momentum in South Texas, suggesting a strong showing among Hispanic voters, but he got blown out in Dallas and parts of East Texas, which was Crockett country.

Meanwhile, some advocacy groups were sending statements about Talarico's success before the AP made any move.

Crockett's nouveau approach to campaigning caught up with her. She was late to TV, focused almost exclusively on her home turf of Dallas and East Texas, and messaged heavily to Black voters. She eschewed a traditional campaign and a long-standing campaign manager, instead recording marathon videos she posted on social media. The novel approach to campaigning excited her base but frustrated Democrats in Washington who saw the race as winnable with the right strategy. Her hard pivot to negative messaging after the Colbert surge soured the few allies she still had in D.C.

Texas is home to the longest statewide dryspell for Democrats in the nation. The last Democrat to win statewide there was in 1994. Senate Democrats' campaign arm had not included Texas in theirpathto the majority, instead looking to hold their current seats and flip others in Alaska, Maine, North Carolina, and Ohio. Texas would be a bonus, not a requirement.

But Democrats haven't had a candidate with crossover appeal like Talarico in a while. Recent Democratic stars rising out of Texas titillated the base, not the middle let alone the right. Democrats cannot win in Texas without a few Republicans and independents giving into their lib-curiosity. And Talarico's pragmatic facade creates what party strategists call "a permission structure," in that it's OK to dip a toe on the other side of the creek.

Talarico clearly understands the task ahead.

"We are not just trying to win an election. We are trying to fundamentally change our politics. And it's working," he said.

Or at least it seemed to get him past Tuesday's lead-off primary.

Make sense of what matters in Washington.Sign up for the D.C. Brief newsletter.

Write toPhilip Elliott atphilip.elliott@time.com.

In Texas, Both Parties Get an Earful About Electability

Texas state representative and Democratic U.S. Senate candidate James Talarico speaks at a primary campaign event in Roun...
South Africa's Lekota, who led breakaway from ANC, dies at 77

JOHANNESBURG, March 4 (Reuters) - South African anti-apartheid activist Mosiuoa Lekota, who broke away ‌from the African National Congress to found ‌a new political party, died in the early hours ​of Wednesday morning, his party said in a statement. He was 77 years old.

Reuters

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* Lekota died after a period of illness and had ‌stepped backfrom ⁠active politics. * He was a close ally of former President Thabo Mbeki ⁠andserved as South Africa's defence minister from 1999 to 2008. * Lekota, nicknamed "Terror" for his fearsome ​skills on ​thesoccer pitch as ​young man, quit in ‌protest at Mbeki's oustingand was voted off the ANC's National Executive Committee afterrepeated criticism of Mbeki's successor, Jacob Zuma. * He co-founded the Congress of the People (COPE) party in2008. * COPE ‌won roughly 7% of the ​vote in the first ​nationalelection it contested, ​in 2009, but its vote share ‌has beenbelow 1% at ​every national ​election since then. * Lekota worked as a student activist during the 1970s. Heserved jail ​time on ‌Robben Island with the country's liberationhero Nelson ​Mandela.

(Reporting by Anathi Madubela and Colleen ​Goko;Editing by Alexander Winning)

South Africa's Lekota, who led breakaway from ANC, dies at 77

JOHANNESBURG, March 4 (Reuters) - South African anti-apartheid activist Mosiuoa Lekota, who broke away ‌from the African ...
Philippine lawmakers advance impeachment of Vice President Duterte

MANILA, March 4 (Reuters) - Philippine lawmakers ordered Vice President Sara Duterte on Wednesday to respond to impeachment complaints against her after finding substance ‌to allegations involving unexplained wealth, the misuse of public funds and ‌making public threats against President Ferdinand Marcos Jr.

Reuters

The daughter of former President Rodrigo Duterte is seen as ​a frontrunner for the 2028 presidential elections, and has said she will run for the top post. She survived a similar impeachment bid last year, which the Supreme Court struck down for violating constitutional safeguards.

If convicted by the Senate at trial, Duterte would ‌be removed from office and ⁠disqualified from holding any future government position.

Duterte's defence team during the impeachment proceedings did not immediately respond to a request for ⁠comment.

Wednesday's vote in the House of Representatives' justice committee comes amid a bitter falling out between the two leaders, both scions of powerful political families, who swept to power ​in ​2022 before becoming rivals.

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Before any vote on ​whether an impeachment trial should go ‌ahead, the House will consider Duterte's response to the charges, if she makes one, as well as any reply from the complainants.

The complaints against Duterte include the misuse of confidential funds, bribery and unexplained wealth, and publicly threatening to have Marcos killed, along with his wife and a cousin who was House speaker ‌at the time.

"This is a very good development ​that the process of accountability is now ​moving," Representative Leila de Lima told ​Reuters. De Lima endorsed one of the complaints against Duterte.

Four ‌impeachment complaints were initially lodged against ​Duterte, but one complaint ​was dismissed over a rule that prohibits such complaints from being filed within a year after previously being submitted. Another complaint was withdrawn to ​fast-track the proceedings and because ‌it was similar to another complaint.

Marcos survived a separate impeachment bid against him ​last month after his allies in Congress voted to dismiss it.

(Reporting ​by Mikhail Flores; Editing by David Stanway)

Philippine lawmakers advance impeachment of Vice President Duterte

MANILA, March 4 (Reuters) - Philippine lawmakers ordered Vice President Sara Duterte on Wednesday to respond to impeachme...
Hurley goes out a winner in what could be his final home game at Arizona State

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — Fans spilled out of the stands onto the court, jumping and shouting in celebration of Arizona State's massive upset.

Associated Press Arizona State head coach Bobby Hurley talks with a referee during the first half of an NCAA college basketball game against Kansas, Tuesday, March 3, 2026, in Tempe, Ariz. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri) Arizona State guard Maurice Odum celebrates with fans after defeating Kansas during an NCAA college basketball game, Tuesday, March 3, 2026, in Tempe, Ariz. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri) Kansas guard Elmarko Jackson (13) fouls Arizona State forward Allen Mukeba (23) during the second half of an NCAA college basketball game, Tuesday, March 3, 2026, in Tempe, Ariz. (AP Photo/Rick Scuteri)

Kansas Arizona St Basketball

As the chaos swirled around him, Bobby Hurley, a coach known for his fiery sideline demeanor, calmly walked along the scorer's table shaking hands with Kansas' coaches and players before heading up the ramp.

No fist pumps, no shouts of joy, even if may have been his final home game.

Just a coach proud of the way his team fought through adversity — just as he did throughout his career.

"These kids care about the game, they want to play the right way, and a lot of them are underdogs, like I always was," Hurley said afterArizona State's 70-60 victoryover No. 14 Kansas on Tuesday night. "And that's why I could relate to them."

Hurley's role as the ultimate underdog was part of what made his hiring 12 years ago such a big splash.

An undersized point guard, he won two national championships at Duke and is still the NCAA's career assists leader. He played five seasons in the NBA before a car accident cut his career short.

Hurley won almost immediately after becoming a head coach, taking Buffalo to the NCAA Tournament for the first time in his second season.

He also won at Arizona State, just not enough.

Through 11 years of ups and downs, Hurley entered the final season of his contract likely needing an NCAA Tournament berth to keep his job. The Sun Devils fell well short, leaving them needing a miracle run at the Big 12 Tournament or bust.

"He is the greatest coach that's ever coached me," said Arizona State guard Moe Odum, who had 23 points against Kansas. "I'd go to war with him anytime. I don't care what anybody says."

If Tuesday night was his final home game, it was quite a way to go out.

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Two of the biggest highlights of Hurley's tenure — outside of three NCAA Tournament appearances — were wins over Kansas in consecutive seasons.

The Sun Devils won at Allen Fieldhouse in 2017 against the second-ranked Jayhawks, part of a 12-0 start that propelled them to No. 3 in the AP Top 25, matching the highest ranking in program history.

The Sun Devils did it again the following season in Tempe, taking down Kansas for their only home win over a No. 1 team.

Fate brought the Jayhawks back for the potential end of Hurley's home finale in the desert.

The Sun Devils came out with the same fire their coach has on the sideline and during his playing days, smothering the Jayhawks while building a 20-point lead.

A coach was ejected and it wasn't Hurley — Bill Self was tossed for arguing an offensive call on Jayhawks star freshman Darryn Peterson.

Kansas stormed back, pulling with four, then back to two after Arizona State again stretched the lead to double digits.

Unlike some of the games they couldn't find a way to finish, the Sun Devils pushed back, shoving the Jayhawks out the door and Hurley to a win in what could be his final game at Desert Financial Arena.

"I don't think it was me," Hurley said. "It would have been a nice storyline, but I really believe that's who they are."

Competitive to the end, just like their coach.

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign uphereandhere(AP News mobile app). AP college basketball:https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-basketball-pollandhttps://apnews.com/hub/college-basketball

Hurley goes out a winner in what could be his final home game at Arizona State

TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — Fans spilled out of the stands onto the court, jumping and shouting in celebration of Arizona State...

 

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