The 2025 NBA Draft is in the books. As the basketball world turns the page to free agency, trade season, and summer league, it’s already time to start looking ahead to next year’s draft class.
The 2026 NBA Draft should already be at the top of mind for teams around the league. This is a rare class with three potential No. 1 overall prospects who are all worth tanking for. I’ve been covering the NBA Draft here since 2014, and I can confidently say the 2026 class has the strongest preseason top-three I’ve evaluated in BYU forward AJ Dybantsa, Kansas guard Darryn Peterson, and Duke big man Cameron Boozer. Getting the No. 2 or No. 3 pick in 2026 is way more valuable than it usually is. Getting the No. 4 pick could feel like a huge letdown depending the development of the rest of the class.
Predicting next year’s NBA draft is an annual tradition for me. You can go back and read my early boards for a fun trip down memory lane from 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024, and 2025 here.
Here’s a way-too-early 2026 NBA mock draft, with more analysis on this class after the table.
Rank | Player | Position | School | Age |
---|---|---|---|---|
Rank | Player | Position | School | Age |
1 | Cameron Boozer | F/C | Duke | Freshman |
2 | Darryn Peterson | G | Kansas | Freshman |
3 | AJ Dybantsa | F | BYU | Freshman |
4 | Jayden Quaintance | C/F | Kentucky | Sophomore |
5 | Nate Ament | F | Tennessee | Freshman |
6 | Chris Cenac | C/F | Houston | Freshman |
7 | Karyim Lopez | F | New Zealand Breakers | Born 2007 |
8 | Mikel Brown Jr. | G | Louisville | Freshman |
9 | Bennett Stirtz | G | Iowa | Senior |
10 | Koa Peat | F | Arizona | Freshman |
11 | Isiah Harwell | G | Houston | Freshman |
12 | Cayden Boozer | G | Duke | Freshman |
13 | Meleek Thomas | G | Arkansas | Freshman |
14 | Caleb Wilson | F | North Carolina | Freshman |
15 | Darius Acuff | G | Arkansas | Freshman |
16 | Dash Daniels | G | Melbourne United | Born 2007 |
17 | Pat Ngongba | C/F | Duke | Sophomore |
18 | Paul McNeil | G/F | NC State | Sophomore |
19 | Brayden Burries | G | Arizona | Freshman |
20 | Dame Sarr | G/F | Duke | Freshman |
21 | Jasper Johnson | G | Kentucky | Freshman |
22 | Adrian Wooley | G | Louisville | Sophomore |
23 | Thomas Haugh | F | Florida | Junior |
24 | Miles Byrd | G/F | San Diego STate | Senior |
25 | Yaxel Lendeborg | F/C | Michigan | Senior |
26 | Flory Bidunga | C/F | Kansas | Sophomore |
27 | JT Toppin | C/F | Texas Tech | Junior |
28 | Ian Jackson | G | St. John’s | Sophomore |
29 | Karter Knox | F | Arkansas | Sophomore |
30 | Kam Williams | F | Kentucky | Sophomore |
Let’s dive in to some of the big storylines in this class.
A stud big man with an unbreakable pedigree of winning at every level. A guard with incredible two-way physicality and shot-making ability from anywhere on the floor. A wing with prototypical length, strength, explosiveness, and shot-making. Who are you taking No. 1 overall?
At the moment, I’d say there’s no wrong answer. Boozer, Peterson, and Dybantsa enter the 2026 draft cycle with what feels like an equal share of No. 1 overall equity. The season will determine how this big three shakes out, but I feel confident all of them will end the year as excellent prospects who project as franchise players for the teams lucky enough to get them.
I went with Boozer as my preseason No. 1. Here’s a long breakdown on everything that makes him special from last year. In short, I’m betting on Boozer for his elite IQ and mentality, his size and power, and his rising skill level. Boozer just feels like he thinks the game two steps ahead of everyone else on the floor. His ability to play with brains and brawn will work at the highest levels of the game even when he’s not the biggest player on the floor. Boozer’s passing will be an automatic plus at the next level with fantastic outlet passing and the ability to be a hub in the halfcourt. The way he gets his team running in transition reminds me of player with a totally different body type: Tyrese Haliburton. He’s going to be a very good scorer off the dribble, too, especially now that he’s showing pull-up three-point shooting to complement his bully-ball driving and skilled interior finishing. Maybe you think Boozer is a little too short for a center and not quite quick enough to be a four. I get it. I wouldn’t be shocked if Boozer goes third in the 2026 draft for those reasons, but I still think he’s the best prospect in this class for his ability to impact winning.
Peterson is an elite prospect, too, and he was briefly No. 1 on my earliest 2026 draft list a few months ago. The 6’5 guard had a senior year for the ages, detonating every blue-chip prospect in his path with an absurd combination of three-level scoring, playmaking, and defensive intensity. Peterson is a relentless scorer with a deep bag of tricks who somehow rarely feels like he’s forcing the action. His physicality is top-notch for a guard in terms of length/strength/explosiveness, and he’s also extremely well-conditioned to play hard as hell on every possession. There aren’t many elite offensive guards who are this disruptive on defense. Peterson is a killer on the basketball floor in every sense, and he’s going to be a day one star for Bill Self at Kansas next season.
Dybantsa is the most highly-touted of the big-three, and probably the most likely to eventually be drafted No. 1 overall. He has an ideal mix of length (7’1), explosiveness, and shooting touch for an NBA wing, and unlike Ace Bailey, he already has a developed handle that allows him to pressure the rim, plus the strength to finish through contact. Dybantsa is a monster prospect in every sense, I just like Boozer and Peterson’s game a little bit more.
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