Dalton and Tristi's NBA mock draft 1.0: Who Warriors, Kings pick in first round originally appeared on NBC Sports Bay Area
The Washington Wizards officially are on the clock. In a loaded class that can be full of future stars, the Wizards will get to choose first with the No. 1 overall pick in the 2026 NBA Draft.
For the Kings and Warriors, the ping pong balls didn’t bring the same kind of luck.
The Kings entered the draft lottery with the No. 5 pick and dropped to No. 7. To make matters worse, the Jazz, whom the Kings were tied with and lost a coin toss to at the end of the season, jumped to No. 2. The Warriors stood pat, starting at No. 11 and leaving the lottery with the same pick.
Can the Kings find a franchise savior? Will the Warriors add a player who can help Steph Curry enough as a rookie? Dalton Johnson and Tristi Rodriguez try their hand at all 30 first-round picks in our mock draft 1.0.
1. Washington Wizards: AJ Dybantsa, SF, BYU
Adding Dybantsa to a possible team of Trae Young, Anthony Davis, Alex Sarr, Bub Carrington, Bilal Coulibaly, Tre Johnson, Kyshawn George and Will Riley would have the Wizards finally finding some magic in D.C. Dybantsa has the makings of a franchise star, and the Wizards have the young players to build something special. –Dalton Johnson
2. Utah Jazz: Darryn Peterson, G, Kansas
While Utahns certainly would have welcomed AJ Dybansta back home to begin his pro career after finishing high school there and then competing at BYU, they’ll be fully content with Darryn Peterson’s services. That Peterson-Keyonte George backcourt duo is going to be a nightmare for opponents. – Tristi Rodriguez
3. Memphis Grizzlies: Cam Boozer, PF, Duke
Boozer’s dad works in the Jazz’s front office and played four seasons for the Bulls. Naturally, his son slots right between both teams as the safest pick in the draft. –DJ
4. Chicago Bulls: Caleb Wilson, PF/C, North Carolina
The Bulls’ surprising 6-1 start to the 2025-26 NBA season (their best since 1996-97) gave Chicago fans something to be excited about, but that didn’t last long. Caleb Wilson’s infectious smile alone will bring a joy back to the Windy City, but his passionate play will give the fanbase something to look forward to for more than just two weeks. – TR
5. Los Angeles Clippers (via IND): Keaton Wagler, G, Illinois
The Clippers traded 7-foot center Ivica Zubac and wound up with the No. 5 pick in a season where they also acquired All-Star point guard Darius Garland. Wagler’s length at 6-foot-6 and ability to score on and off the ball make him a good fit in the backcourt next to Garland. –DJ
6. Brooklyn Nets: Darius Acuff Jr., PG, Arkansas
After falling in the draft lottery once again, the Nets will have to make the best of their situation – whatever that means for a cursed franchise. Not cursed, however, are players under the John Calipari coaching tree entering the NBA (Devin Booker, Shai Gilgeous-Alexander, Karl-Anthony Towns, Tyrese Maxey, etc.). Maybe a good omen for Brooklyn? Hey, we said maybe. – TR
7. Sacramento Kings: Kingston Flemings, PG, Houston
I mean … it’s written in the name, right? The last time the Kings had a true natural two-way star guard was … Doug Christie in the early 2000s. Now 20-something years later, Christie’s defensive-minded approach hasn’t changed as coach of the Kings. Kingston Flemings is a Doug Christie guy on paper.
While defense is Fleming’s strength, his explosiveness with the rock in his hand can be useful for Sacramento, a team in need of a starting point guard since shipping De’Aaron Fox to NBA playoff paradise alongside Spurs star Victor Wembanyama in San Antonio
Flemings averaged 5.2 assists and 1.8 turnovers in 37 games with Houston. He also averaged 1.5 steals per game, but his defensive style shows more when watching his film versus looking at a stat sheet. His active hands and ball pressure create havoc for opponents.
The 19-year-old shot an efficient 47.6 percent from the field and 38.7 percent from 3-point range while averaging 16.1 points as Houston’s primary option. – TR
8. Atlanta Hawks (via NO): Mikel Brown Jr., PG, Louisville
Atlanta’s first-round playoff exit exposed some of its weaknesses. The Hawks need another consistent shot creator to pair with CJ McCollum, and Mikel Brown Jr. – whether with his shooting from 30 feet away or his explosive dunks – might be the answer. – TR
9. Dallas Mavericks: Brayden Burries, G, Arizona
Burries is a combo guard who can slide in as an early contributor and grow alongside the Mavs’ Cooper Flagg-led future as someone who does a bit of everything. As a freshman, Burries led Arizona in total 3-pointers (70) and steals (59). –DJ
10. Milwaukee Bucks: Nate Ament, F, Tennessee
The Bucks are in a bad place. Giannis Antetokounmpo wants out and they know it, so they might as well take the massive upside swing on Ament. –DJ
11. Golden State Warriors: Yaxel Lendeborg, F, Michigan
Though the Warriors didn’t rise in the draft lottery after a season in which tanking wasn’t their problem, they’re still sitting pretty at No. 11. General manager Mike Dunleavy has never drafted higher than 19, and this is the move that will kick off such an important offseason. Taking Lendeborg is the safe pick. But that doesn’t mean upside is out the window.
Lendeborg is 23 years old and will be 24 before playing in an NBA game. So what? As a shooter, Lendeborg has improved from 3-point range every season. He went from shooting 35.7 percent from three on 1.9 attempts per game his final year at UAB to taking 4.5 threes per game at 37.2-percent clip.
The versatile forward measured in a tad under 6-foot-9 barefoot at the combine and is a strong 241 pounds with a wingspan over 7-foot-3. If the Warriors keep their pick, they need a rookie that will be part of the rotation. Lendeborg is the first answer. –DJ
12. Oklahoma City Thunder: Aday Mara, C, Michigan
OKC’s cap crunch might lead to some tough decisions around Isaiah Hartenstein, meaning they could be on the hunt for a new big. Aday Mara could soak up some of those frontcourt minutes alongside Chet Holmgren. — TR
13. Miami Heat: Labaron Philon Jr., G, Alabama
The Heat will take the best player available and be happy Philon is there. Philon made the leap as a sophomore and averaged 22.0 points and 5.0 assists per game on 50.1-percent shooting with a 39.9 3-point percentage. –DJ
14. Charlotte Hornets: Morez Johnson Jr., PF/C, Michigan
The Hornets need to strengthen their frontcourt depth with a floor-spacing big, and they can find that in the versatile and physical Morez Johnson Jr. — TR
15. Chicago Bulls (via POR): Cameron Carr, SG, Baylor
This could be the prospect rising up draft boards after measuring in at 6-foot-4.5 barefoot at the combine with a wingspan just under 7-foot-1. Carr was a scoring machine as a junior at Baylor, averaging 18.9 points per game on 49.4/37.4/80.1 shooting splits. –DJ
16. Memphis Grizzlies (via PHX): Chris Cenac Jr., PF/C, Houston
As Memphis focuses on frontcourt athleticism and versatility, Chris Cenac Jr. is a player who can make an impact on both ends of the floor. — TR
17. Oklahoma City Thunder (via PHI): Karim Lopez, F, New Zealand Breakers
The rich get richer. Lopez has been a pro since he was 14 years old and has an NBA body at 19 with the traits to form a role as a rookie as his shot continues to develop. –DJ
18. Charlotte Hornets (via ORL): Jayden Quaintance, C, Kentucky
As the NBA constantly evolves, one thing that won’t ever go out of style is rim protection and high-level shot blocking. That’s what Jayden Quintance brings with his active and disruptive defense. — TR
19. Toronto Raptors: Allen Graves, PF, Santa Clara
Graves started just four games as a redshirt freshman at Santa Clara. He’s also seen as an analytics darling, shooting 41.3 percent from three at 6-foot-9 while also averaging 1.9 steals per game. –DJ
20. San Antonio Spurs (via ATL): Hannes Steinbach, PF/C, Washington
An interior menace (as if the Spurs don’t already have one standing 7-feet-4), Hannes Steinbach averaged a nation-leading 11.8 rebounds per game at Washington. — TR
21. Detroit Pistons (via MIN): Meleek Thomas, SG, Arkansas
The new-age Grit and Grind Pistons need shooting and more scoring. Thomas checks both boxes after averaging 15.6 points per game and shooting 41.6 percent beyond the arc in the same freshman backcourt as Acuff. –DJ
22. Philadelphia 76ers (via HOU): Dailyn Swain, SG/SF, Texas
Ironically enough, one of Dailyn Swain’s NBA comps is Kelly Oubre Jr. The 6-foot-7, 220-pound athletic forward/wing will offer frontcourt support to complement Joel Embiid and Tyrese Maxey. — TR
23. Atlanta Hawks (via CLE): Ebuka Okorie, PG, Stanford
The Hawks would be adding two of the most interesting guards in the whole draft. Okorie came out of nowhere to average 23.2 points per game as a freshman with the opposing team’s scouting report having all eyes on him. –DJ
24. New York Knicks: Koa Peat, PF/SF, Arizona
Mike Brown appreciates more than anybody a well-rounded player who’s capable of doing a little bit of everything on the floor. Koa Peat is that guy. — TR
25. Los Angeles Lakers: Henri Veesaar, C, North Carolina
With Luka Doncic leading the Lakers, they need more talent at center. In comes Veesaar, who averaged 17.0 points, 8.7 rebounds and shot 42.7 percent from three as a 7-foot senior. –DJ
26. Denver Nuggets: Bennett Stirtz, PG, Iowa
With a need for increased offensive firepower and facilitation when Jamal Murray sits, Bennett Stirtz is an option as a high-IQ playmaker and shooter for Denver. — TR
27. Boston Celtics: Amari Allen, Wing, Alabama
Josh Hart averaged 16.5 points and 7.0 rebounds in four games against the Celtics this season, plus went 11 of 23 on 3-pointers. Here’s how they can find their version of Hart. –DJ
28. Minnesota Timberwolves (via DET): Christian Anderson, PG, Texas Tech
Despite drafting Rob Dillingham in 2025, the Wolves could use Christian Anderson to ease the creative burden on Anthony Edwards. — TR
29. Cleveland Cavaliers (via SA) – Isaiah Evans, Wing, Duke
It’s a wing league, and Evans has all the looks of a trusted shooter on the wing who averaged 15.0 points per game as a sophomore and shot 38 percent in his two years at Duke. Evans can get forgotten because of Boozer, but he was a big reason why Duke had the kind of success it did last season. –DJ
30. Dallas Mavericks (via OKC): Tarris Reed Jr., PF/C, UConn
Tarris Reed Jr. turned heads during the NCAA tournament en route to an appearance in the national championship game, recording four double-doubles during March Madness. — TR