2026 NBA Draft: Where Arizona players are projected to go following draft lottery

arizona-wildcats-nba-draft-lottery-2026-brayden-burries-koa-peat-jaden-bradley-veesaar-mock-projections
CHICAGO, IL - MAY 10: Brayden Burries and Koa Peat pose for a picture during the 2026 NBA Draft Lottery on May 10, 2026 at Navy Pier in Chicago, Illinois. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Jeff Haynes/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

The NBA Draft Lottery is finished and we now know which teams will be picking in what order. This means there is pretty much 20/20 vision as to where Arizona standouts Brayden Burries and Koa Peat will be heading. It would be the third consecutive year that a Wildcat was taken in the NBA Draft and the second straight year that one was taken in the first round.

If Burries and Peat are taken, they would be players six and seven taken in the Tommy Lloyd era. Overall, they would be the eighth and ninth players under Lloyd to make it to the NBA.

Last year it was Carter Bryant going to the San Antonio Spurs in the first round, while the year before it was Pelle Larsson taken by the Miami Heat in the second round. Bennedict Mathurin, Dalen Terry, and Christian Koloko were taken in the 2022 NBA Draft. Undrafted free agents Keshad Johnson and Caleb Love have also played in the NBA.

While Burries and Peat are the standouts from Arizona who have entered this year’s draft, Jaden Bradley is also projected to be taken in the second round.

Here are some projections as to where all three players could be taken on various mock drafts. Analysis from each site is included in italics when provided:

Brayden Burries

ESPN: No. 9 to Dallas Mavericks

Burries endeared himself to teams over the course of the season as a steady two-way contributor with room to grow as a scorer. Scouts see an intriguing upside as he continues to improve as an on-ball playmaker, but he is a solid enough shooter to play the 2, giving him appealing versatility. He is older than other freshman guards in the lottery and not as toolsy or flashy, but he might be closer to directly impacting winning.

New York Times: No. 9 to Mavericks

Burries was the leading scorer on one of the top three teams in the country, despite a slow start that saw him average just 7.8 points in his first five games. From that point, he averaged 17.3 points while shooting 51 percent from the field, 41 percent from 3 and 81 percent from the foul line in his final 34 games. He’s also an aggressive rebounder who grabbed 5.5 boards per game in that time, while averaging 2.4 assists as a solid ball mover who didn’t take many bad shots.

The question is about separating from his man consistently, as he’s more of a power guard who uses the threat of his shot to keep defenders off-balance. Burries turned into a really good defender by the end of the year and averaged 1.5 steals. For Dallas, Burries would be a terrific complement to Cooper Flagg and Kyrie Irving as they look to make a jump next year.

CBSSports: No. 9 to Mavericks

Burries is a strong and aggressive two-way guard who can get downhill with force, provide a formidable three-point shooter, and simultaneously defend his position. He’s also more physically ready to make the transition to the NBA game than most of the other one-and-done guards in the draft. Alongside Cooper Flagg, the Mavs not only have young talent, but young two-way talent.

Koa Peat

ESPN: No. 24 to New York Knicks

Peat opted to declare for the draft and has an opportunity to play his way up the boards with a strong predraft process. Some teams viewed him as an excellent candidate to return to school and improve his stock, an option that remains available to him. Scouts view his perimeter shooting as a critical swing skill that will impact his trajectory, as he is not particularly effective scoring outside 15 feet at this stage of his career. But his strength and quickness relative to his size, coupled with a solid offensive feel and ability to guard the perimeter, give him a chance to find a niche in the right situation.

New York Times: No. 16 to Memphis Grizzlies

Peat prompts a wide range of opinions from NBA scouts. On the plus side, he has won everywhere he’s been and is one of the most decorated players in his age group. He won state titles and four gold medals with Team USA in youth events, then helped carry Arizona to a Final Four. He averaged 14.1 points while shooting 53 percent from the field and is a tough, physical rebounder. He passes well and makes excellent decisions to keep his team in the flow of the offense, be it in short rolls out of ball screens or on the wing. If you need him to score, he can do that as we saw in the NCAA Tournament, where he averaged 17.2 points and 7.6 rebounds while shooting 48.5 percent from the field and taking a bigger offensive load. Or, he can slide into a role as a tough, physical defender who takes on different matchups and then makes quick reads.

Yet, the flaws jump off the page. He’s not really a shooter, as he’s only taken 20 3-point attempts and made seven of them while hitting just 62.3 percent of his attempts at the foul line — basically in line with his averages at lower levels. Defensively, he’s not overly fast, and there are possessions when you see him get beaten laterally by quicker players, although I did think he was a good defender by the end of the season.

CBSSports: No. 14 to Charlotte Hornets

Peat is another polarizing prospect because he’s strong, physical, can finish, rebound, short-roll to get downhill, and even play-make a bit, but doesn’t shoot. He was pivotal to Arizona’s Big 12 championships and Final Four run, and loaded with winning intangibles. That DNA is very much in line with what we saw Charlotte prioritize last year, when they nailed the 2025 draft with Kon Knueppel, Ryan Kalkbrenner, and Sion James.

Jaden Bradley

ESPN: No. 51 to Washington Wizards

New York Times: No. 48 to Orlando Magic

It’s also worth noting that former Arizona Wildcat Henri Veesaar is projected, in most mock drafts, to go to the Los Angeles Lakers at No. 25. Tune in on June 23 to see where the next “Wildcats in the NBA” will be heading.

Some Post-Lottery Reactions About Cam Boozer

CHICAGO, IL - MAY 10: Cameron Boozer talks to the media during the 2026 NBA Draft Lottery on May 10, 2026 at Navy Pier in Chicago, Illinois. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Melissa Tamez/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Now that the draft lottery is over, people can start to make some educated guesses about who goes to what team.

Here’s an interesting factor we had not considered: not only is Carlos Boozer Cameron Boozer’s father, he’s also a scout for the Utah Jazz, and the Jazz hold the #2 pick.

Utah can get an 18-year scouting report on Boozer. In all seriousness, Carlos could deliver the most in-depth analysis of not just Cameron’s basketball talents, but also the most in-depth psychological analysis any athlete has ever received.

The question is how objective he could be. Even so, it’s a valuable gift to the Jazz, whatever they decide to do.

Generally speaking, everyone seems to expect Washington to take BYU’s AJ Dybantsa with the #1 pick. But this guy argues that Washington needs post play more, and Boozer fits the bill.

On the other hand, here’s an argument that Boozer’s tailor-made for Memphis, that he and Zach Edey would be monstrous inside. He would also be teammates with near-Devil Cedric Coward, who committed to Duke as a transfer last season before opting to stay in the draft.

Meanwhile, this article expects that with the fourth pick, Chicago will get either Boozer or UNC’s Caleb Wilson. If it works out that way, that’s not bad.

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Kenny Atkinson revealed what the key is for Cavs in Game 4 vs. Pistons

SACRAMENTO, CA - MARCH 19: Head Coach Kenny Atkinson of the Cleveland Cavaliers coaches Jarrett Allen #31 during the game against the Sacramento Kings on March 19, 2025 at Golden 1 Center in Sacramento, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2025 NBAE (Photo by Rocky Widner/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

INDEPENDENCE — The Cleveland Cavaliers won Game 3 against the Detroit Pistons, but in a way that their head coach called “unsustainable” 15 minutes after the final buzzer. The next day after practice, he echoed those same sentiments.

“I hate to keep bringing up that possession game stat, -14,” Kenny Atknison said about Game 3. “I think there’s a big difference between the first and second half. Minus two in the possession game in the second half. So we did better. Like I said postgame, that’s not sustainable, especially the rebounding.”

The Pistons are one of the best teams in the league at grabbing offensive rebounds and forcing turnovers. They collected 34.3% of their missed shots in the regular season (2nd) and turned over their opponent on 16.8% of defensive possessions (1st). Consistently creating more opportunities for their offense allowed a somewhat stagnant attack to finish the season just inside the top 10 for offensive rating.

We’ve seen the benefit of this through the first three games of the series.

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The Pistons have grabbed over 34% of their missed shots in all three games so far this series. That puts them above the 69th percentile or better each game. This has translated to 19, 16, and 18 second-chance points.

The Cavs cleaned up the turnover issues after struggling in Game 1. They’ve committed a lower percentage of turnovers for possessions in the most recent two games of the series. They’ve shown that they can overcome this problem. The same isn’t true for the rebounding, which is worrying Atkinson.

There are a couple of factors that go into winning the rebounding battle. How you play defense is one of them.

“There’s certain schemes you rebound better at,” Atkinson said. “It’s just a fact. So we take that into account. Unfortunately, they got a great player (Cade Cunningham). We have to be up higher. Our bigs aren’t as close to the rim.”

Physicality is the other.

“Their bigs are elite, elite at offensive rebounding,” Atkinson said. “A lot of times, our bigs are wrestling with their bigs. That’s why Donovan [Mitchell] having 10 rebounds was huge last night. Max [Strus] is coming in. It’s going to be a guard-rebounding series.”

These clips show why that’s so important. Jarrett Allen and/or Evan Mobley are busy boxing out Detroit’s bigs. If you’re boxing out properly, making sure your assignment doesn’t get the ball, you’re creating a way for one of your teammates to come in and secure the possession.

Rebounding is a team activity, and not always an individual stat.

“We are giving it our best effort,” Jarrett Allen said. “They are strong. They are big bruisers down there, and will say even though we don’t get the rebounds, Donovan having 10 rebounds last night, six rebounds in the other game [is huge].”

The Cavs have shown for spurts that they can keep Detroit off the glass. Particularly, down the stretch of Game 3 where they allowed just five offensive rebounds compared to the 12 they surrendered in the first half. Whether they’re able to play more like the second half or not will go a long way in determining whether they can come back in this series.

Open Thread: Victor Wembanyama ejected from Game 4

May 10, 2026; Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA; San Antonio Spurs center Victor Wembanyama (1) commits a level two flagrant foul against Minnesota Timberwolves center Naz Reid (11) in the second quarter of game four of the second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs at Target Center. Wembanyama had to leave the game. Mandatory Credit: Bruce Kluckhohn-Imagn Images | Bruce Kluckhohn-Imagn Images

Sunday evening’s Game 4 in Minneapolis did not go as planned for the San Antonio Spurs.

With  8:39 left in the second quarter, Wemby was ejected when his right elbow hit Reid’s throat.

Forgetting for a second that, had it been any other player, the elbow would have landed on Reid’s chest, the foul represents a lapse in Victor’s judgement and tranquility. Considering his pursuit of ethical basketball, the move is most uncharacteristic.

Unfortunately, the implications of the flagrant technical 2 are not yet complete. Victor Wembanyama could face a game suspension of the incident due to the nature of this foul. The NBA will review the play as standard procedure, which means there is a chance the league could decide on its own punishment.

After the game, head coach Mitch Johnson praised Wemby for “protecting himself,” pointing out that Wemby has been physically challenged beyond a realm of appropriate.

After the game, studio analysts Vince Carter, Carmelo Anthony, and Tracy McGrady said there is no chance Wemby misses Game 5.

Spurs are back in San Antonio Tuesday night for the tiebreaker at the Frost Bank Center.


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Kentucky Wildcats News: Karl-Anthony Towns into the Eastern Conference Finals

May 10, 2026; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA; New York Knicks center Karl-Anthony Towns (32) reacts after game four of the second round of the 2026 NBA Playoffs against the Philadelphia 76ers at Xfinity Mobile Arena. Mandatory Credit: Kyle Ross-Imagn Images | Kyle Ross-Imagn Images

The New York Knicks are headed back to the Eastern Conference Finals for the second consecutive season after completing a dominating sweep of the Philadelphia 76ers on Sunday afternoon.

After falling behind 2-1 against the Atlanta Hawks in the Quarterfinals, there were questions to if this current Knicks nucleus could win in the postseason and make a realistic push for the NBA Finals to contend for a title.

New York answered those questions by becoming one of the hottest teams in all of basketball, and in large part due to the offensive play of Karl-Anthony Towns, who put on an absolute clinic over the last four games.

In Sunday’s series clincher, KAT put up 17 points, 10 assists, four rebounds, and two blocks in just 20 minutes.

The former Kentucky Wildcat averaged 15 points, eight rebounds, and seven assists over the four-game sweep in just 23 minutes of action. He’s completely taken control of facilitating the offense and has the Knicks as the favorite to represent their conference in the NBA championship.

One flaw for Towns, though, has been his play on the defensive end, and that could become a problem as the postseason continues. Towns committed four or more fouls in each game of the semis, leading to fewer minutes on the court and leading to inconsistencies with the Knicks’ lineups.

He has four or more fouls in seven of the 10 playoff games so far, so it’s a consistent issue that he’s going to have to fix if the Knicks hope to win another series — or two — over the next month.

Tweet of the Day

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Headlines

Late Additions Have Changed Kentucky Basketball Seasons – KSR

Hard to believe this is the year.

Knicks sweep 76ers, return to Eastern Conference finals – ESPN

Red hot.

A Keith Bogans Jersey Belongs in the Rupp Arena Rafters – KSR

Absolutely.

Wizards win draft lottery; Jazz, Grizz, Bulls round out top 4 – ESPN

The order is set.

PREDICTION: Kentucky Beats Alabama in Will Stein’s SEC Opener – KSR

This would be something.

Pritchard on Pacers losing No. 5 pick: ‘Sorry’ to our fans – ESPN

Mega fumble.

Kentucky Makes the Final Cut for Coveted Offensive Line Target – KSR

Big momentum boost.

Scott Boras: Tigers ace Tarik Skubal could have short rehab – ESPN

Good news for Detroit.

Which 2026 NBA Draft prospects have most to prove at scouting combine?

The 2026 NBA Draft lottery is in the books. Every NBA team knows when it's drafting in the 2026 NBA Draft, and so now the evaluation process begins in full. Front office personnel from around the league, top prospects and their agents have all convened in Chicago this week for the annual NBA draft combine.

The entire draft class typically goes through medical examinations, as well as agility and shooting drills, at Wintrust Arena with private workouts conducted through agents during the week-long event. There are also live-action scrimmages the top of the draft class usually decline to play in, but the right performance in front of so many influential eyes can often propel a fringe prospect.

This year's combine will feel different than some of its recent predecessors due to the decline in underclassmen who have declared for the draft, which is a reflection of the NIL money available at the college level these days. But it nonetheless carries enormous weight for players trying to improve their draft stock while figuring out whether to return to school before the NBA Draft's June 13 early entry withdrawal deadline.

Here's a look at a group of players, as well as two potential college basketball national championship contenders, with the most at stake as the 2026 NBA Scouting Combine gets underway in Chicago:

When is the 2026 NBA Draft Combine?

The 2026 NBA Draft Combine officially began on Sunday, May 10 at Wintrust Arena in Chicago and runs through Sunday, May 17. It is not open to the public.

2026 NBA Draft Combine: Prospects with most at stake

Darryn Peterson, Kansas

The Kansas star doesn't have to show NBA teams he might be the best prospect in this draft class based on talent. They know that. But if he's to be the No. 1 pick, Peterson will have to prove to the Washington Wizards front office that the mysterious health issues surrounding his availability with the Jayhawks were indeed just a one-off due to the introduction of creatine into his workout regimen. Peterson's medical evaluation with the NBA at the scouting combine is likely to be scrutinized as much as any prospect.

Nate Ament, Tennessee

Ament began this season at Tennessee rated as a potential top-10 pick in the 2026 NBA Draft. An intriguing but inconsistent freshman year has him hovering with a group of prospects who could go in the lottery or fall to late in the first round. Ament is perhaps the most intriguing because of his length as a wing and long-term development possibilities. He could benefit from the measurement portion of the combine. Ament nearly returned to the Vols for a lucrative NIL offer, according to multiple reports, so his draft position will determine whether he made the right decision.

Koa Peat, Arizona

Peat, like Ament, watched his draft stock slide a bit despite a relatively successful freshman season at Arizona. There are concerns about Peat's lack of perimeter shooting and whether his physical style can translate to the NBA. What his measurements are at the combine, as well as how we he does in shooting drills, will help dictate if he's closer to a potential lottery pick or more like a fringe first-round pick.

Jayden Quaintance, Kentucky

The 6-foot-10 center played just four games at Kentucky this past season after spending his first year of college at Arizona State and suffering a torn ACL. The former five-star recruit has been pegged as a potential lottery pick for years and showed flashes of becoming a defensive force as Arizona State. He can show NBA evaluators in Chicago that he has put the knee injury behind him and cement his status as a lottery pick and possible steal in this deep class.

Allen Graves, Santa Clara

Graves blossomed into a 6-foot-9 two-way playmaker as a redshirt freshman while helping Santa Clara make the NCAA tournament. He has to decide whether to stay in the NBA draft or return to college as one of the most coveted players in the transfer portal. As a 19-year-old who was an under-the-radar recruit out of high school in Louisiana, Graves fits the mold of a player whose stock could improve with a strong showing at the combine. Former Santa Clara standout and current Oklahoma City Thunder star Jalen Williams did just that in 2022 when he became a first-round draft pick.

Santa Clara Broncos forward Allen Graves (22) dribbles against Gonzaga Bulldogs guard Tyon Grant-Foster (7) during the second half at Leavey Center on Feb. 14, 2026.

2026 NBA Draft Combine: College teams with most at stake

Michigan Wolverines

The defending national champions have three players invited to the NBA combine and two have left open the possibility of returning to the Wolverines. Aday Mara seems more likely stay in the draft than Morez Johnson, Jr., but there's a possibility both go pro. Michigan coach Dusty May has replenished the Wolverines' roster through the transfer portal, but bringing back either one of these two impact players would place Michigan squarely in the national championship hunt again.

Arkansas Razorbacks

Perhaps no school could benefit more from a poor showing at the combine than the Razorbacks (even though coach John Calipari would never say that out loud). Guards Meleek Thomas and Billy Richmond III have both declared for the draft while maintaining their college eligibility to return to Arkansas. Both could be late first-round picks or even second-round picks, and therefore have the potential to earn more money next season staying in college. If both are back at Arkansas, or maybe even just one, the Razorbacks will be a national title contender despite losing likely top-10 pick Darius Acuff, Jr.

NBA Draft Scouting Combine 2026 invite list

  • Matt Able, North Carolina State
  • Darius Acuff Jr., Arkansas
  • Amari Allen, Alabama
  • Nate Ament, Tennessee
  • Christian Anderson, Jr., Texas Tech
  • Tobe Awaka, Arizona
  • Flory Bidunga, Kansas
  • Tyler Bilodeau, UCLA
  • John Blackwell, Wisconsin
  • Cameron Boozer, Duke
  • Kylan Boswell, Illinois
  • Nick Boyd, Wisconsin
  • Jaden Bradley, Arizona
  • Trevon Brazile, Arkansas
  • Maliq Brown, Duke
  • Mikel Brown Jr., Louisville
  • Braydon Burries, Arizona
  • Cameron Carr, Baylor
  • Chris Cenac, Jr., Houston
  • Rueben Chinyelu, Florida
  • Ryan Conwell, Louisville
  • AJ Dybantsa, BYU
  • Zuby Ejiofor, St. John's
  • Isaiah Evans, Duke
  • Jeremy Fears Jr., Michigan State
  • Kingston Flemings, Houston
  • Ja'Kobi Gillespie, Tennessee
  • Allen Graves, Santa Clara
  • Keyshawn Hall, Auburn
  • Juke Harris, Wake Forest
  • Joshua Jefferson, Iowa State
  • Morez Johnson Jr., Michigan
  • Alex Karaban, UConn
  • Jack Kayil, Alba Berlin (Germany)
  • Sergio de Larrea, Valencia (Spain)
  • Tobi Lawal, Virginia Tech
  • Yaxel Lendeborg, Michigan
  • Karim Lopez, New Zealand Breakers (NBL)
  • Aday Mara, Michigan
  • Nick Martinelli, Northwestern
  • Baba Miller, Cincinnati
  • Dillon Mitchell, St. John's
  • Milan Momcilovic, Iowa State (also in transfer portal)
  • Malachi Moreno, Kentucky
  • Izaiyah Nelson, South Florida
  • Tyler Nickel, Vanderbilt
  • Ebuka Okorie, Stanford*
  • Felix Okpara, Tennessee
  • Ugonna Onyenso, Virginia
  • Otega Oweh, Kentucky
  • Koa Peat, Arizona
  • Darryn Peterson, Kansas
  • Labaron Philon, Alabama
  • Jayden Quaintance, Kentucky
  • Tarris Reed Jr., UConn
  • Billy Richmond III, Arkansas
  • Richie Saunders, BYU
  • Emanuel Sharp, Houston
  • Braden Smith, Purdue
  • Hannes Steinbach, Washington
  • Bennett Stirtz, Iowa
  • Andrej Stojakovic, Illinois
  • Peter Suder, Miami (Ohio)
  • Luigi Suigo, Mega (Serbia)
  • Dailyn Swain, Texas
  • Tyler Tanner, Vanderbilt
  • Meleek Thomas, Arkansas
  • Bruce Thornton, Ohio State
  • Milos Uzan, Houston
  • Henri Veesaar, North Carolina
  • Keaton Wagler, Illinois
  • Caleb Wilson, North Carolina
  • Tounde Yessoufou, Baylor

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: NBA draft prospects, teams with most at stake during scouting combine

A two-step plan for a successful Rockets offseason

NBA fans often want their general managers to make decisions that, if they were in the same shoes, they may not make themselves.

It’s human nature. If you’d been there, he wouldn’t have gotten away with it. You’d have done the brave thing. If I were in charge, we wouldn’t be in this mess.

Until you’re there, and you don’t, or you are, and we are. For example, NBA fans love the idea of “selling high”. If you were the general manager of an NBA team, you may not be willing to specifically move a player because he’s playing well. When your job is on the line, high-risk profiles lose some appeal.

So I wrote that if I were Rafael Stone, I’d split Alperen Sengun and Amen Thompson up this summer. That would mean either moving Sengun for pieces or Thompson for a high-volume three-point shooting star. I will not lose my The Dream Shake position if the Rockets do that and it goes poorly.

Stone probably won’t trade either of his two highest-performing young draftees to date. That’s defensible. That doesn’t mean he should sit on his hands this summer.

So, once again, as someone with minimal skin in the game, as a guy whose life is not affected by the Houston Rockets to any more than the extent to which I allow it to be, I have a plan. If Stone isn’t going to make franchise-altering moves, he still has to tinker on the margins.

He has to do the bare minimum. Here’s a two-step plan for him to do exactly that.

1. Trade Clint Capela for a combo guard

Were you expecting Dorian Finney-Smith?

Again – bare minimum. During the Rockets’ exit presser, there seemed to be a sentiment that Finney-Smith will have a chance to bounce back from an abysmal season with a summer to rehabilitate. To paraphrase 90s Australian pop sensations Savage Garden:

“Oh, I want (him), I don’t know if I need (him), but, oh, I’m (probably going to) find out”.

Yet, there is no reason to keep Capela. He was Steven Adams’ insurance. Adams got hurt, the playoffs came, and Ime Udoka didn’t trust Capela to get on the floor anyway. If nothing else, it was a realistic facsimile of how insurance typically actually does shake out.

As such, Capela will have minimal trade value. Still, the Rockets should be able to fetch someone with his modest contract and some second-round draft capital.

Leading candidates include Tre Mann (who, as an aside, always makes me think of a superhero whose superpower is cashing treys), D”Angelo Russell, Cam Spencer, and Bradley Beal.

Decidedly unsexy names. Still, each would bolster the Rockets’ ball-handling and floor spacing without stepping too firmly on the toes of Reed Sheppard and Amen Thompson with a returning Fred VanVleet in the fold. Flipping Capela for a guard would balance the roster:

But we still need that Adams insurance.

2. Sign Andre Drummond

Not a player like Andre Drummond. Not a player with a comparable skillset:

Very specifically, Andre Drummond.

Drummond’s development as a floor spacer has quietly been a watershed moment in the development of the center position. This was one of those guys who was just never going to shoot the three-ball.

How about 35.6% on 1.4 attempts per game? Nobody is mistaking Drummond for the omnipresent Myles Turner, but those are solid apples. He’s a floor spacer now.

He also remains one of the single best rebounders in the history of the NBA. He didn’t play enough minutes to qualify for leader boards, but his 17.5% Offensive Rebounding Percentage would have ranked second in the league, his his 29.8 Defensive Rebounding % fourth, and his overall Rebounding Percentage first in the entire league.

On a related note: Ime Udoka.

If you hadn’t heard, he likes rebounding. Moreover, Drummond’s newfound floor spacing ability should make him a more viable dual big pairing with Sengun. The Rockets need to trade Capela, and then, they need to sign Drummond in free agency to replace him.

It’s the least they can do.

2026 NBA Draft Lottery And What They Mean for the Celtics

CHICAGO, IL - MAY 10: The Washington Wizards win the 1st overall pick during the 2026 NBA Draft Lottery on May 10, 2026 at Navy Pier in Chicago, Illinois. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2026 NBAE (Photo by Chris Schwegler/NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images

Without a game being played, the NBA draft lottery is one of the most impactful days on the NBA calendar. A surefire way to build a championship-caliber team is with picks at the top of the NBA Draft. The Celtics’ success over the past decade has been driven by two top-3 picks. If you survey this year’s playoff landscape, you see the court littered with guys like Victor Wembanyama, Cade Cunningham, Anthony Edwards, and Karl Anthony Towns, Chet Holmgren, all of whom are necessary pillars on playoff juggernauts.

BROOKLYN, NY – JUNE 23: Jaylen Brown shakes hands with NBA Commissioner Adam Silver after being selected number three overall by the Boston Celtics during the 2016 NBA Draft on June 23, 2015 at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. Mandatory Copyright Notice: Copyright 2016 NBAE (Photo by Nathaniel S. Butler /NBAE via Getty Images) | NBAE via Getty Images
NEW YORK, NY – JUNE 22: Jayson Tatum walks on stage with NBA commissioner Adam Silver after being drafted third overall by the Boston Celticsduring the first round of the 2017 NBA Draft at Barclays Center on June 22, 2017 in New York City. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Mike Stobe/Getty Images) | Getty Images

The lottery is especially significant this year. The upcoming draft is viewed as having three, maybe four, franchise-altering prospects: AJ Dybantsa, Cam Boozer, Darryn Peterson, and Caleb Wilson. Because I am selfish and can only think of NBA happenings as they pertain to the Boston Celtics, let’s examine how the 2026 NBA Lottery results impact our beloved team.

Most importantly, we avoided the two crisis situations that could have been catastrophic for not just the Boston Celtics but the entire NBA: both the Oklahoma City Thunder and Indiana Pacers being stripped of their chance to pick in the top four of this year’s draft. The Thunder are the defending champions and are currently undefeated in the playoffs. Handing them another blue-chip prospect would have been a doomsday scenario for the league. Thankfully, the basketball gods decided that the 7.1% chance of OKC jumping into the top four would not come to fruition. 

Eastern Conference teams can breathe a sigh of relief as the Indiana Pacers not only dropped out of the top four, but lost their pick entirely to the Los Angeles Clippers as part of the Ivica Zubac trade. As we have seen with Jayson Tatum’s recovery from his Achilles injury, it’s reasonable to assume Haliburton can return to his pre-injury self, priming the Pacers to return to their championship-caliber form. Had the Pacers had the chance to add a six-foot-eight Jaylen Brown-type prospect to their team in AJ Dybantsa, it would have fortified them as a contender in the conference. 

While the two most impactful scenarios that could stand in the way of Banner 19 did not come to fruition, it wasn’t a perfect day for the Celtics. With the Washington Wizards, fellow Eastern Conference resident, securing the number one overall pick, they now have an intriguing and potentially dangerous core — “potentially” being the keyword here. I am dubious of a team relying on Anthony Davis to make them a legit playoff contender. Sure, the Sacramento Kings getting the number one pick would have been optimal, but the Wizards are still a long way from being a real threat.

A fun bit of trivia comes out of the Wizards getting the first overall pick; Anthony Davis has now been involved in four instances of teams securing the number one overall pick. AD himself was the number one overall pick. The year Davis left the New Orleans Pelicans, they jumped up in the lottery to select Zion Williamson. After Davis was moved in the Luka Doncic trade, the Dallas Mavericks lucked into the first pick with only a 1.8% chance of jumping into the top spot. And now the Wizards land the number one overall pick.

Next, we have the Utah Jazz and Memphis Grizzlies, two Western Conference teams who jumped into the second and third draft slots instead of Eastern Conference teams. While I think it’s possible the Jazz could be frisky and push for 50 wins next season, they are not a threat to win the title. Memphis jumping into the third spot keeps another blue-chip prospect in the West. We love to see that.

If an Eastern Conference team is going to jump up in the Draft Lottery, it may as well be the Chicago Bulls. They have given us very few reasons to believe they are a serious organization since the departure of Michael Joran.

We move to the the fallout as it relates to a potential Celtics trade involving Giannis Antetokounmpo.  Most significantly, the Milwaukee Bucks did not receive the monumental amount of luck needed to turn their bleak situation around. The Bucks required both the Pelicans and their own pick to jump into the top four in order to benefit from any shenanigans. The Miami Heat have been reported as a potential suitor for Giannis, with the Heat staying put at the 13th pick, their trade offer continues to be a pu pu platter of uninspiring young players and mediocre draft picks. For those who are intent on the Celtics trading for Giannis Antetokounmpo, the Lottery results have arguably improved the team’s chances of making that happen. 

Lastly, the countdown for the Cooper Flagg trade demand to the Boston Celtics is on. The Dallas Mavericks were not rewarded with back to back years of miraculous lottery luck. They dropped from the 8th best odds to the 9th pick in the draft. Now, the Mavericks do not control their own draft pick until 2031. Dallas will get Kyrie Irving back next season, but he is going into his age 34 season. The path for the Mavericks to get back to playoff contention is murky at best. Will Flagg get fed up with being a perennial lottery team without a lottery pick? We can dream.

And if you have any Brooklyn Nets fans in your life, I would implore you to do a wellness check on them. Their future is bleak. 

Cavs expected to win Game 4, but have an uphill battle to win Eastern Conference

CLEVELAND, OHIO - MAY 09: Donovan Mitchell #45 of the Cleveland Cavaliers reacts after a play against the Detroit Pistons during the fourth quarter in Game Three of the Second Round of the NBA Eastern Conference Playoffs at Rocket Arena on May 09, 2026 in Cleveland, Ohio. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Jason Miller/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Only 34 of the 471 teams that have fallen behind 2-0 in an NBA playoff series have come back and won the series. The Cleveland Cavaliers are trying to become the 35th team to do so as they attempt to climb out of that hole against the Detroit Pistons. Winning Game 4 and evening the series would go a long way in helping them do so.

As of now, the Cavs are favored in Game 4 and have a good chance of doing so. FanDuel lists Cleveland as a 3.5-point favorite in Game 4. So far this series, the favored team has won all three games and covered the point spread in the process. The Cavs are hoping that trend continues on Monday.

The race out of the Eastern Conference is clearing up with the New York Knicks sweeping the Philadelphia 76ers. Understandably, the Knicks are the favorites to come out of the conference as they’re -150 to do so.

The Pistons are closely behind. FanDuel lists them at +200 to win the East. The Cavs are far behind at +650 to do so.

These odds mirror how things look for the Cavs in terms of winning a championship. The Cavs have the fifth-lowest odds to win the Finals among the seven remaining playoff teams at +4000. The Pistons are just in front of them at +1800.

This rationale makes sense. The Cavs are behind in the series. Even if they tied things up in Game 4, they would still need to win on the road at least once to prevail in the series. Picking up a road win has alluded them so far this postseason as they’ve dropped all five road games. Since 2023, the Cavs are a combined 4-13 away from Rocket Arena in the postseason.

We’ll see if the Cavs can come back against the Pistons in their second-round series.

You can follow all of the playoff action with FanDuel.

Wembanyama ejected as Spurs beaten by Timberwolves

Victor Wembanyama points as he is ejected from the game
Victor Wembanyama did not speak to the media following his ejection from game four on Sunday [Getty Images]

Victor Wembanyama was ejected for the first time in his NBA career - for elbowing an opponent - as his San Antonio Spurs side were beaten 114-109 by the Minnesota Timberwolves in game four of the Western Conference semi-finals.

France international Wembanyama, 22, had grabbed the rebound of a missed Spurs three-pointer early in the second quarter and was protecting the ball when he turned around and appeared to elbow Timberwolves' Naz Reid in the jaw.

The incident was initially called as a offensive foul, as fans in Minneapolis chanted "kick him out, kick him out".

And, after a video review of the play by the officials, it was upgraded to a flagrant 2 - which is an automatic ejection and a minimum of $2,000 (£1,464) fine - for excessive contact above the neck.

When the ejection was announced, Wembanyama appeared to ask Spurs team-mate Harrison Barnes: "What does that mean?"

Timberwolves' victory on Sunday levels the best-of-seven series at 2-2 before game five in San Antonio, Texas on Tuesday.

Spurs coach Mitch Johnson said, while he did not condone Wembanyama's actions, he was glad he "took matters into his own hands" as he believes the 7ft 4in (2.24m) star needs more protection from referees.

Johnson added: "I'm glad Naz Reid is OK and I didn't want him to elbow him. But [Wembanyama's] going to have to protect himself if no-one else does for him. And I think it's disgusting."

Wembanyama finished with four points and four rebounds in just under 13 minutes of action, while his Spurs team-mates De'Aaron Fox and Dylan Harper scored 24 points each.

Reid, meanwhile, contributed 15 points and nine rebounds off the bench for the Timberwolves.

"We never expected them just to go away," Timberwolves coach Chris Finch said.

"They won a game in the Portland series without Wembanyama, so they're a very good team."

Also on Sunday, the New York Knicks advanced to the Eastern Conference finals as they brushed aside the Philadelphia 76ers 144-114 in game four.

Miles McBride scored 25 points and Jalen Brunson added 22 points to hand the Knicks a 4-0 series clean sweep.

The Knicks will take on top-seeded Detroit Pistons or fourth-seeded Cleveland Cavaliers for a spot in the NBA Finals.

Owner of eatery that created the Philly cheesesteak will cook at Long Island pizzeria in Knicks gear after losing bet

Owner of eatery that created the Philly Cheesesteak will cook at Long Island pizzeria in Knicks gear as punishment for lost bet.
Owner of eatery that created the Philly Cheesesteak will cook at Long Island pizzeria in Knicks gear as punishment for lost bet.

Maybe it was a misteak.

The descendant of the brothers credited with creating the first Philly cheesesteak will make the renowned sandwiches at a Long Island pizzeria — while wearing head-to-toe Knicks gear — after losing a bet with the eatery’s co-owner.

Frank Olivieri, proud owner of Philadelphia’s iconic Pat’s King of Steaks, will begrudgingly wear orange and blue while slinging sandwiches at Dario’s Pizza in West Hempstead after the Knicks annihilated the 76ers 144-114 on Sunday.

Frank Olivieri owns Pat’s King of Steaks in Philadelphia. The Washington Post via Getty Images

Olivieri had instigated a friendly wager with the pizza parlor’s co-owner, Louis Cretella. The pair bet on which teams would win, Olivieri siding with the 76ers and Cretella with the Knicks — and the loser would have to travel to the other’s restaurant and cook for a day in the winning team’s gear.

“[Olivieri] wanted to make a wager on game three. I said, let’s bet the whole series,” Cretella told The Post.

Olivieri is accustomed to losing, but held out hope for his Philadelphia team until the bitter end.

“We always have a feeling that the 6ers, or anyone else in Philly are going to come back. We’re used to saying ‘maybe next year’,” he told The Post.

He shrugged off the impending ignominy, adding that he’s “been meaning to try [Dario’s] cheesesteak anyway.”

“I figured it would be a good way to extend some brotherly love to our brothers up in New York and on Long Island,” he added.

Olivieri made a bet with Dario’s Pizza co-owner Louis Cretella. Alex Mitchell / NY Post

Olivieri and Cretella haven’t set a firm date for when the cheesesteak connoisseur will grace the Long Island pizzeria, but suggested that this may not be the end of their game.

“We’re willing to do another bet in the next round, whether it’s a place Cleveland or Detroit, so we’ll see,” Cretella said.

The Knicks advanced to the Eastern Conference Finals and will play the winner of the Detroit Pistons vs. the Cleveland Cavaliers series.

Cretella changed the pizzeria’s computer system to rename the Philly cheesesteak the Philly SUCKS cheesesteak. Alex Mitchell / NY Post

The friendly wager came about after Olivieri learned his ancestors’ cheesey, meaty creation had come under fire amid the NBA’s Eastern Conference Semifinals, where the Knicks were pitted against the 76ers.

Many eateries in New York City seized on the rivalry and cheekily desecrated their menus’ Philly cheesesteaks, including Dario’s Pizza.

Olivieri will cook cheesesteaks at Dario’s while wearing Knicks gear. Alex Mitchell / NY Post

Cretella changed the menu item from Philly cheesesteak to the Philly SUCKS cheesesteak in the restaurant’s computer system. Hard copy menus also have the “Philly” crossed out and “F*** Philly” in black marker written over it.

Olivieri took notice and reached out to place the bet he has now lost.

Winners, Losers from NBA Draft Lottery: Shameless tanking for the win. And Toni Kukoc.

It feels ironic that the Washington Wizards became the first team with the worst record to get the No. 1 pick since the NBA switched to these new lottery odds — just in time for the league to change everything next year to "fix" tanking. Again.

The way the ping-pong balls bounced this year left some big winners and some painful losers. Let's break down who won and who lost in the 2026 NBA Draft Lottery.

Winner: Shameless tanking

The Washington Wizards traded for Trae Young and Anthony Davis and barely played them to maintain their lottery odds (to be fair, AD was injured). The Utah Jazz were the face of tanking in the league, got a massive fine, traded for Jaren Jackson Jr. and mostly sat him to keep their draft position. The Memphis Grizzlies were just a couple of games out of the play-in when they traded Jackson to the Jazz and started tanking in earnest, going 5-28 the rest of the way.

All three of those teams were rewarded and have the top three picks in this draft. If you wonder why the league thinks it needs a new lottery system to fix tanking, this is the prime example.

Winner: Toni Kukoc, Chicago Bulls

Chicago jumped up to the top four because Toni Kukoc brought the swagger.

Six years ago, when Arturas Karnisovas took over as the lead executive in Chicago, the Bulls jumped up from seventh in the lottery odds to get the No. 4 pick, which they used to select Patrick Williams. That pick (and subsequent contract) was an anchor on Karnisovas' entire tenure.

This year, Bryson Graham has taken over as the lead executive in Chicago, and the Bulls jumped from ninth in the lottery odds to get the No. 4 pick. Most likely, they will use that on North Carolina's Caleb Willson, unless Memphis falls in love with him, in which case Cameron Boozer of Duke likely falls to the Bulls. Either way, Graham needs this pick to work out.

Winner: Washington Wizards

Washington was active in "pre-agency" at the trade deadline last February, getting good deals on two former All-Stars other teams were looking to dump move on from: Trae Young and Anthony Davis. This is a team that already had some promising young players like big man Alex Sarr and last year's first-round pick Tre Johnson. This was a team that was already going to be better and in the postseason mix in the East.

Now they likely add AJ Dybantsa, the 6'9" ultra-talented, ultra-athletic wing out of BYU, who seems like a perfect fit. Suddenly, the Wizards look interesting next season.

There is a report that Washington might be open to trading down, via Jake Fischer of The Stein Line. Sure, if someone comes in with a Godfather offer they can't refuse, but that's unlikely at best. The Wizards are not giving up their first No. 1 pick since selecting John Wall in 2010, a pick that has the fan base excited, without some overwhelming talent returning.

Loser: Brooklyn Nets

The most talent-starved team in the league was let down by the basketball gods. While they will still get a quality player at No. 6 — likely a star guard like Darius Acuff Jr. or Keaton Wagler — but it's not the guy or the lottery luck they were hoping for.

Brooklyn is on track to struggle again next year, and with the coming new “3-2-1" lottery system, their chances of adding that elite talent just got longer.

Winner: Utah Jazz

The lottery gods finally smiled on the Jazz. Which is ironic because they became the face of tanking this season when the league fined them $500,000 for playing their stars 20 minutes a game, then benching them in the stretch and losing. It turns out that what the league wanted was just for the Jazz to make up an injury and bench them all game, so they did. The Jazz got all the bad press, and the basketball gods rewarded them.

This is another team already building something with guard Keyonte George and big man Walker Kessler, plus last year's No. 1 pick Ace Bailey. They already had Lauri Markkanen and then added Jaren Jackson Jr. at the deadline. Now put Kansas guard Darryn Peterson in the mix and they look like a potential playoff team starting next season.

Loser: Indiana Pacers

You know it's not good when just after the lottery the GM steps up and takes the blame.

As part of the trade to bring in Ivica Zubac in February, the Pacers traded their pick this year to the Clippers, but it was top-four protected. While the Pacers finished with the league's second-worst record, that made it basically a coin toss (52% to 48%) whether they would lose their pick. They did lose it, which essentially means they traded the No. 5 pick for Zubac. Make no mistake, Zubac with a healthy Tyrese Halliburton is a good pairing — and the Pacers will be back contending for the East crown next season with him — but that is a steep price.

Winner: LA Clippers

If the Pacers are losers, then the Clippers must be winners. They get to add another high-level player to a roster that is getting retooled in the next couple of years.

They are going to be an interesting team on draft night. At No. 5, that's where a run of strong point guards starts, except the Clippers traded for Darius Garland during the season (for James Harden). LA needs to find a guard or wing who can play off ball, not just on, which might be Keaton Wagler.

Loser: Sacramento Kings

Call it an ethical tank if you want, the Kings were just bad this season. At No. 7, they are still going to get a quality player, but maybe not the star they were hoping for to anchor their rebuild. Also, like Brooklyn, the Kings may be bad again next year but with flatter lottery odds (almost certainly a part of whatever system the owners approve) it will be even harder for Sacramento to get that elite talent.

Loser: New Orleans Pelicans

We knew this would be the case when it happened last June. That's when the Pelicans traded the rights to their pick this year to jump up 10 spots and select Derik Queen. Now we know that it is the No. 8 pick. Queen showed promise this season, but that looked like a bad trade at the time and it may be worse now.

Surging Knicks will enter Eastern Conference Finals as prohibitive favorite after second-round sweep

PHILADELPHIA - A few notes from Game 4 of the Knicks’ sweep of the Sixers

AWAKENED IN ATLANTA

The seeds for the Knicks’ demolition in Philadelphia were planted about three weeks ago. 

The Knicks, in Miles McBride’s words, got "punched in the mouth" by the Hawks in Game 3 of their first-round series. 

Instead of wilting, New York considered it a wake-up call. 

Yes, the Knicks changed their offense after that loss on April 23 -- that’s been well-documented

But the offense isn’t the only thing that changed. 

“I feel like our mindset shifted,” McBride told SNY. “We know we’re the better team (but) we can’t just come out there and expect to win, because they’re talented too. So I feel like our mindset just shifted totally to ‘take the game’ instead of (waiting for) them to give us the game.”

McBride certainly had a "take the game" approach on Sunday. 

He made four three-pointers in an 81-second span to give the Knicks an early 14-point lead.

New York never looked back, building a 24-point lead at halftime and going up by as many as 44 in the second half. 

They beat Philadelphia by 30 to extend their playoff win streak to seven games, winning each of those by an average of 26.4 points. 

Given the circumstances, has any Knick team in the last 50 years played a better seven-game stretch?

Don’t think so. 

Now New York will enter the Eastern Conference Finals as the prohibitive favorite. 

“I think the more we’ve played together as a team, the more we’ve grown. And we’ve continued to get better,” Jalen Brunson said. “It’s a chemistry thing. It’s a feel thing. It’s how things get better. Things get better over time.”

Things are getting better at the right time for Brunson and the Knicks.

A SLOW BUILD

The Knicks underwhelmed for long stretches of the regular season. Fans and media questioned their legitimacy again and again. But that sentiment never effected the team, Brunson says. 

“It was a rollercoaster for sure,” he said. “I think outside the Knicks organization, things looked worse than what they were. From the outside looking in. But inside the building, we were working every single day to be the best team we can be. That’s all we were focusing on. 

“There were times when there were positives and negatives, ups and downs. But that’s what our goals were. And that’s still our goal. Be the best we can be. Continue to learn. Continue to get better. The journey shows you who you are.”

So far, the journey has shown that the Knicks are a resilient, talented team. 

Now, they can take a short rest and get ready for the next round of the playoffs. 

The conference final will start on either Sunday or Monday. Game 4 of Cavs-Pistons is Monday night.

What NBA Draft prospects will Brooklyn Nets consider at #6?

Ed Mulholland/Getty Images

Not sure if you heard, but the Brooklyn Nets fell to the sixth overall pick in the 2026 NBA Draft. If you want to hear the longest F-bomb in the history of Locked on Nets, hosted by Erik Slater, here’s Sunday’s episode, where Slater and I talked and groaned through the latest Brooklyn Nets disappointment…

Terance Mann provided a more SFW reaction on social media…

The two-year tank is over. The Houston Rockets have swap rights with the Brooklyn Nets next season, though given the ultra-flattened odds set to come into effect, there is a world where both the Nets and Rockets miss the playoffs, and Brooklyn gets a decent pick anyway. But GM Sean Marks can’t bank on that, and besides, it’s a bit too early to think about the 2027 NBA Draft Lottery; the Nets have all but sworn to improve next season after winning just 46 games over the past two seasons.

Luckily, they have Head Coach Jordi Fernández, who, despite the record, seems to be pretty good. After that, it’s bleak. Michael Porter Jr., with one more year on his contract, is up for an extension likely in the $40 million range. Nic Claxton, with two years left on his $22 million AAV deal, has likely regressed into negative-value territory, though perhaps there are some executives around the NBA who don’t watch enough of the Nets to know that yet. Day’Ron Sharpe is a pretty good backup center, especially with a $6 million team option next season. Egor Dëmin had a nice rookie season all things considered, though he has much work to do to become a valuable playoff contributor. The other rookies are much, much further away. Josh Minott seems like a real player. Ziaire Williams might be too. We’ll see about Noah Clowney.

Barring some splashy summer moves, that’s about it. So who can the Nets add with the #6 overall pick in June? Who can we get excited about? (Let’s assume that Dybantsa/Boozer/Peterson/Wilson go with the first four picks, in some order.)

Kingston Flemings

I think you’ll hear this name a lot leading up to the NBA Draft. Flemings, a 19-year-old guard who had an incredibly productive freshman season for the University of Houston, had been linked to the Nets throughout the season — perhaps there’s already some mutual interest between the two sides. Kevin O’Connor of Yahoo Sportsmocked him to the Nets following the lottery drawing…

The quick sell is simple: Flemings defends, he drives the ball, and his 2.9 assist:turnover ratio could indicate some real playmaking ability. And for a guy whose shot was questioned, well, 38.7% from deep on six attempts per 100 ain’t bad, nor is 84.5% from the line and 44% on long twos. At 6’4”, can he play with enough force to finish inside consistently? Does his outside jumper have room to grow?

These are the questions, but given his strengths — not to mention a lauded work ethic and disposition —it’s easy to see the Nets taking a chance on him at #6.

Darius Acuff Jr.

He’s probably going to be there at #6. Maybe the Chicago Bulls take him at #4 ahead of Caleb Wilson, and it’s also possible the Los Angeles Clippers take the SEC Player of the Year at #5 despite already rostering another small guard in Darius Garland.

But it feels like this 19-year-old and the Nets are going to hear a lot about each other in the coming months. Listed 6’3”, Acuff is a polarizing prospect, not because of his height but in part because of his frame. He is quite skinny — shifty but not overly explosive — and he is the betting favorite to be the worst defender in the NBA next season. He rarely rebounded, stole, or deflected the ball in college. It’s not easy for any young guard in the league, but Acuff’s defensive effort at Arkansas was consistently under the microscope, not to mention the frame.

Now that that’s out of the way, good God can he play offense. He was at the absolute center of John Calipari’s offense, handling a ton of pick-and-roll, and shot 60% at the rim, 40% from the midrange, 44% from deep, and had 3x as many assists as turnovers. Again, he won SEC Player of the Year and the SEC Tournament’s MVP. The arguments about what it means to be a small guard in the NBA won’t be fun, but his highlights…that’s another story.

Keaton Wagler

The Illinois guard could certainly get picked by the Clips at #5, but we have another offense-first guard (get used to it) in the mix. ESPN and The Athletic each have the 19-year-old as the #5 overall prospect, as the 6’7” 19-year-old can theoretically play at either guard spot and bring valuable shooting + passing skills to the table. He and Egor Dëmin would comprise the NBA’s least explosive backcourt next season, but some of Wagler’s highlights are just nutty…

Worried that he’s not blowing by people? Fair. But the frame might help him survive; sounds a little bit like a certain Russian ballplayer I know.

Mikel Brown Jr.

Mikel Brown Jr. is already 20 years old and played just 21 games for Louisville in his lone NCAA season, dealing with a lower back injury. You want the sell? Just check out his 45-point night against NC State…

Like Acuff Jr., Brown’s not gonna provide much defensive or rebounding value; he’s going to have to be an overwhelming offensive threat … which he might be.

He rarely got to the rim this season, and didn’t finish well when he got there, and he only shot 34.4% from deep. But Brown shot a million of ‘em, largely off the dribble, shot well on midrange jumpers, and dropped some high-level dimes out of the pick-and-roll. Plus, he was a consensus top-10 player in his high school class, and we know the Brooklyn Nets love them some pre-draft-year pedigree.

Others

My gut is that those are the four names you’ll be hearing the most, but there are certainly not the only options for the Brooklyn Nets at #6. Remember, Egor Dëmin wasn’t even in the picture when Brooklyn first drew #8 last season.

  • Labaron Philon Jr.: He’ll turn 21 early next season after playing at Alabama for two seasons, but the 6’4” guard has an electric highlight tape and shot nearly 40% from three this season. He was a better playmaker his sophomore season, and though he put up very few rebounding/defensive numbers, posting a 63 TS% while carrying a huge offensive load is more than impressive.
  • Aday Mara: He’s 21, he’s slow, yes, yes, yes. But the Spanish big man is also 7’3” with commendable passing and rim protection instincts. Drafting him at #6 wouldn’t be the sexiest pick, but it’s conceivable that he ends up as one of the draft’s six best players.
  • Yaxel Lendeborg: Born in Puerto Rico to Dominican parents but raised in New Jersey, Lendeborg is 23 years old. He’ll be 24 when training camp opens. However, the big wing was one college basketball’s best all-around players this past season, winning a title with Aday Mara at Michigan while making threes, making twos, rebounding, passing, blocking shots, and rarely turning it over. Is Lendeborg going to be the ideal role-playing wing?
  • Dailyn Swain
  • NateAment
  • Brayden Burries

If we’re making a really long list, I could’ve thrown a couple more names in there. There is little consensus after the first four picks. The Brooklyn Nets have the opportunity to select the best prospect they’ve had since moving to Brooklyn, but it will not be easy.

Let’s get this out of the way now: They are not trading up. It’s not happening.

What the heck would Brooklyn have to offer the teams at the very top of the draft?

Trading down is infinitely more feasible, though perhaps not likely. But it may be the right move for the Nets if they particularly like one of the older prospects like Swain/Lendeborg/Joshua Jefferson or a less heralded guard like Tyler Tanner or Bennett Stirtz. The guards projected to go in the 5-9 range are quite talented, but all have very real question marks. The older prospects, if nothing else, could be more ready to help Brooklyn take a step forward next year, perhaps quelling some of the fanbase’s frustrations. (And saving some jobs?)

The NBA Draft Lottery Gods did not smile upon the Brooklyn Nets on Sunday afternoon, but once again regarded them with wrath. That doesn’t mean the Nets can’t draft a great player, though. Here’s to hoping.

Lakers vs. Thunder Game 4 Preview: Is this it for L.A.?

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - MAY 09: LeBron James #23 of the Los Angeles Lakers reacts against the Oklahoma City Thunder during the fourth quarter in Game Three of the Second Round of the NBA Western Conference Playoffs at Crypto.com Arena on May 09, 2026 in Los Angeles, California. NOTE TO USER: User expressly acknowledges and agrees that, by downloading and or using this photograph, User is consenting to the terms and conditions of the Getty Images License Agreement. (Photo by Harry How/Getty Images) | Getty Images

Now on the brink of elimination, the Los Angeles Lakers look to avoid being swept in Game 4 against the Oklahoma City Thunder on Monday.

Start time and TV schedule

Who: Los Angeles Lakers vs. Oklahoma City Thunder

When: 7:30 p.m. PT, May 7

Where: Crypto.com Arena

Watch: Prime Video


Unless the Lakers have a miracle in them to come back from a 3-0 series deficit, this series feels pretty much over. No matter what adjustment the Lakers come up with, what’s been established is that they’re simply not better than the Thunder.

And that’s why Los Angeles is on the verge of being swept — unless they have something to say about it.

In order to keep their season alive on Monday, the Lakers have to do something they haven’t done in this series: outplay the Thunder. This means LeBron James and Austin Reaves have to give more than what they already have in the last three games and hope most of their supporting cast play extraordinarily well.

This is what James and Reaves pretty much implied after Game 3. But the question is, will they follow through?

Over the years in the playoffs, there have been times when the Lakers let go of the rope — remember the Nuggets series in 2023 — simply because they couldn’t compete anymore. They can do that on Monday, too, but it’ll be up to them.

This season has obviously not been perfect for the Lakers, but if there are two things they have consistently done, it’s compete to the best of their abilities and rise to the occasion. That’s why it’ll honestly be a surprise if this team doesn’t go down swinging. They owe it to themselves at least to keep fighting until the final buzzer.

Whether fighting means controlling the paint, stepping up their defense, especially against the Thunder’s role players — looking at Ajay Mitchell — or simply coming out stronger in the third quarter, this is the game where the Lakers throw everything they have at OKC and let desperation take over.

Let’s see if that works for the purple and gold and if they can live to fight another day on Monday.

Notes and Updates

  • For the Lakers’ injury report, only Luka Dončić (left hamstring strain) is out.
  • As for the Thunder, Jalen Williams (left hamstring strain) and Thomas Sorber (ACL surgery recovery) will not suit up.

You can follow Nicole on Twitter at @nicoleganglani.