Monte McNair is back in Los Angeles, and the Clippers are leaning on a familiar front-office voice as they try to steer through a major reset.
McNair has taken an advisory role with the Clippers after mutually parting ways with the Sacramento Kings last year, and he has now rejoined Los Angeles in that same capacity. The Athletic’s Sam Amick first reported the move Monday afternoon.
The timing matters. The Clippers are in the middle of a high-stakes transition after the end of the Kawhi Leonard and Paul George era.
They traded Kawhi Leonard to the Toronto Raptors and used the fifth overall pick in last month’s draft on Illinois freshman guard Keaton Wagler. Los Angeles once had James Harden, Paul George and Leonard on the same roster with title ambitions, but that chapter is over, and McNair is there to help guide what comes next.
His background is the reason the Clippers wanted him around. McNair spent five seasons as Sacramento’s general manager from 2020 to 2025, and his run there included both the groundwork and the payoff for a playoff team. The Kings hired him on Sept. 17, 2020, and he immediately started reshaping the roster.
One of his first major decisions was taking Iowa State guard Tyrese Haliburton with the 12th pick in the 2020 NBA Draft, a move that helped offset the loss of guard Bogdan Bogdanović to the Atlanta Hawks in free agency. Sacramento then had a backcourt built around De’Aaron Fox’s speed and scoring alongside Haliburton’s playmaking.
After the Kings finished 31-41, 10 games under .500, they landed the ninth overall pick in 2021. McNair used it on Baylor guard Davion Mitchell to strengthen the defense after Sacramento gave up 117.4 points per game. The Kings still missed the playoffs, finishing 30-52.
McNair’s biggest swing came during the 2021-22 season, when he sent Haliburton to the Indiana Pacers for center Domantas Sabonis on Feb. 8, 2022. That trade became the move that helped set up Sacramento’s breakthrough the next year.
He kept building from there. The Kings got the fourth overall pick in the 2023 NBA Draft and selected Iowa forward Keegan Murray. McNair also hired Mike Brown as coach, traded for sharpshooter Kevin Huerter and signed free agent guard Malik Monk.
That roster finally ended a 16-year playoff drought. Sacramento finished 48-34, McNair won Executive of the Year, and Brown took Coach of the Year honors.
But the momentum didn’t last. The Kings missed the playoffs in back-to-back seasons as injuries hit the roster, and McNair eventually moved on after trading away the franchise star. He sent Fox to the San Antonio Spurs last February.
After two disappointing seasons, McNair and Sacramento mutually parted ways. Now he’s back with the Clippers, helping a front office that needs direction as it tries to build something new.
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