The NBA Draft Lottery is complete, with the Washington Wizards walking away with the No. 1 overall pick in what many consider a loaded draft. The odds makers at FanDuel currently have AJ Dybantsa out of Brigham Young University as the favorite to go first overall at -500. The kid did well, and he can thank former Phoenix Suns assistant Kevin Young for his tutelage as the BYU head coach.
For Phoenix, the lottery was a non-event. The Suns traded away their 2026 first round pick during the journey that began with the acquisition of Bradley Beal back in 2023. Because Phoenix made the postseason, the pick never had a chance to jump into the lottery. It landed at 16th overall and heads to the Memphis Grizzlies, who also own the third overall selection in this draft.
So yesterday came and went quietly for Suns fans. No sitting around worrying the math somehow broke against Phoenix’s and pushed their former pick into the top four of a potentially generational class.
That being said, attention now shifts toward the draft, and the mock drafts are starting to flood in as analysts try to piece together who goes where. For the Phoenix Suns, holding the 47th overall pick means there isn’t much value in most mainstream mock drafts right now. Why? Because almost everyone is focused on solving the first round puzzle. The second round is an afterthought.
In Phoenix, it shouldn’t be.
That pick is an opportunity to add another young player to the roster and hope your development system can turn them into something impactful. Youth has never mattered more in the NBA, especially with the way the cap and apron system is structured. One of the clearest paths to staying competitive is stacking productive players on rookie-scale contracts.
That’s the challenge, though. Those players actually have to become productive.
Once the rookie-scale deal expires, teams are pushed into an awkward game of chicken where they almost have to overpay to retain the player. That’s how bad contracts happen. Look at the Denver Nuggets and Christian Braun. Tough season. Quiet postseason. Now the extension kicks in next year at five years, $125 million, and Denver is paying the tab for a mid-level player until 2031. That significantly impacts roster flexibility.
So even if the 47th pick isn’t flashy, the hope is that your scouting department and your culture can identify someone who matters. We’ve already seen signs of that. Oso Ighodaro was selected 40th overall and played all 82 games last season. Koby Brea went 41st overall last year, and even on a two-way deal, there’s a path for him to carve out minutes if Grayson Allen or Royce O’Neale get moved this offseason.
So no, the 47th pick is not a throwaway asset. That said, second-round mock drafts are still hard to find right now. I still did the due diligence and pulled together a mock draft roundup so we can see who different outlets have the Suns taking at No. 47.
Here’s what we found.
| Site | Player | Position | School |
|---|---|---|---|
| ESPN | Jeremy Fears, Jr. | PG | Purdue |
| NBADraft.net | Jeremy Fears, Jr. | PG | Michigan State |
| Tankathon | JT Toppin | PF | Texas Tech |
| Bleacher Report | Keyshawn Hall | SF/PF | Auburn |
| Yahoo! Sports | Aiden Tobiason | SG | Syracuse |
There’s always a conversation around the NBA Draft about whether you draft for need or draft for best player available. Looking at the mock drafts above (and again, there really aren’t many of them right now, where’s your second round mock, The Ringer? Where are you, CBS Sports? Get on it!) a few of these mocks are clearly prioritizing talent over fit.
Jeremy Fears Jr., whose brother Jeremiah Fears was a lottery pick last season and now plays for the New Orleans Pelicans, appears to be a popular target at 47. Why? Because the thought process is simple. He could be the best talent available at that point in the draft.
That’s the question you have to ask yourself when you’re drafting that late. Talent or need? The Suns don’t need more guards. We know that. At the same time, this is a player you hope to develop over the next couple of years into someone who can eventually contribute.
That said, I really like the prospect Tankathon connected to Phoenix in JT Toppin. He checks both boxes. Talent and need. ESPN had him mocked around 36 in preseason projections before an ACL injury against Arizona State pushed him down boards. He wouldn’t be available immediately because he’d still be rehabbing, and honestly, that’s okay. Whoever the Suns draft at 47 probably isn’t walking into an immediate rotation role anyway.
This is a long-term play. That’s the lens you have to use. You’re drafting for what this player could become in a couple of seasons, hoping they help build toward what you ultimately want this team to be.
So what do you think about the early names showing up in these mock drafts? Does anyone stand out to you? What would you draft, talent or need? Is there another prospect Phoenix should target? Or do these mocks have it completely wrong? Let us know in the comments below.