The first round of the 2026 NBA Draft is officially complete, and it delivered a night of high drama. Held live at the Barclays Centre in Brooklyn, league front offices reshaped the professional basketball landscape with blockbuster trades, franchise-defining selections, and a few head-scratching reaches that left analysts stunned.
With elite prospects like AJ Dybantsa and Cameron Boozer heading a historically deep class, the stakes were incredibly high. Now that the dust has settled from Tuesday night’s action, it is time to break down the draft boards. Below are the biggest winners and most shocking losers from Round 1 of the 2026 NBA Draft.
Top Winners of the 2026 NBA Draft
1. Utah Jazz: Securing a Future Core Piece
The Utah Jazz walked away from Tuesday night celebrating their night intensely. Picking at No. 2 overall, the Jazz secured Kansas guard Darryn Peterson.
Peterson is widely regarded as one of the most dynamic, smooth-scoring guards entering the league in years. He possesses an advanced three-level scoring arsenal and elite defensive instincts that make him a perfect backcourt partner for Utah’s existing young core. Acquiring a player of Peterson’s calibre at the second slot gives Utah an immediate identity and a legitimate cornerstone asset.
2. San Antonio Spurs: Building a Twin Towers Nightmare
If you thought driving into the paint against Victor Wembanyama was terrifying last season, things just got significantly worse for the rest of the NBA. At No. 20 overall, the San Antonio Spurs selected Kentucky big man Jayden Quaintance.
Draft Steal Alert: Quaintance was widely projected to go much higher in the draft before a minor knee injury caused him to slide down the boards on draft night.
Quaintance is an incredibly athletic rim runner and a ferocious shot blocker. By pairing him next to Wembanyama, the Spurs have constructed a terrifying defensive frontline. Even if Quaintance begins his career anchoring the second unit, securing a top-tier lottery talent at pick 20 is an absolute masterclass in value drafting.
3. Detroit Pistons: Giving Cade Cunningham a Pure Bucket-Getter
The Detroit Pistons made one of the savviest moves of the night by trading into the 17th spot via the Memphis Grizzlies to select Stanford guard Ebuka Okorie.
Okorie is a flat-out scoring machine who can create his own shot from anywhere on the floor. For a Pistons team looking to elevate Cade Cunningham into the MVP conversation, adding Okorie is a home run. He can relieve immense pressure off Cunningham, serving as a secondary playmaker who thrives both on and off the ball.
The Biggest Losers and Shocking Reaches
1. Dallas Mavericks: A Bizarre Hometown Reach
The Dallas Mavericks turned heads for all the wrong reasons at No. 9 overall. After naming Michigan’s Dusty May as their new head coach earlier in the week, rumours swirled that he might look to bring one of his former collegiate standouts along. Those rumours became reality when Dallas selected forward Morez Johnson Jr.
While Johnson is an exceptional defensive “glue guy” who impacts winning, taking him at No. 9 felt like a massive reach for a rebuilding Mavericks squad. With elite value still left on the board, Dallas left a ton of upside on the table to make a safe, coach-centric pick.
2. Chicago Bulls: Mixed Signals in the Mid-First Round
The Chicago Bulls started their night brilliantly by snagging North Carolina forward Caleb Wilson at No. 4 overall—a pick that earned unanimous praise. However, their second selection at No. 15 left fans and analysts completely bewildered.
The Bulls used the 15th pick on Arizona swingman Dailyn Swain. While Swain has an enticing physical frame and plenty of raw potential, he is very much a long-term developmental project. Passing on proven, high-upside guards like Bennett Stirtz or Christian Anderson when the team desperately needs backcourt depth makes this an incredibly risky gamble.
3. Charlotte Hornets: Ignoring Clear Frontcourt Needs
The Charlotte Hornets entered Tuesday night with a glaring weakness: frontcourt depth. With a backcourt already featuring LaMelo Ball, Brandon Miller, Miles Bridges, and Rookie of the Year candidate Kon Knueppel, adding size was the obvious move.
Instead, the Hornets selected Texas Tech guard Christian Anderson at No. 18. Anderson is a highly talented player, but his redundant skill set creates an immediate logjam in an already crowded Charlotte backcourt. Failing to address their structural weakness inside makes the Hornets one of the night’s clearest losers.
2026 NBA Draft: First Round Top 15 Selections
To contextualize how the draft board shook out around these winners and losers, here is a look at the official top 15 selections of the first round:
| Pick | Team | Player | Position | School/Club |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Washington Wizards | AJ Dybantsa | SF | BYU |
| 2 | Utah Jazz | Darryn Peterson | SG/PG | Kansas |
| 3 | Memphis Grizzlies | Cameron Boozer | PF | Duke |
| 4 | Chicago Bulls | Caleb Wilson | SF/PF | North Carolina |
| 5 | LA Clippers | Keaton Wagler | SG/PG | Illinois |
| 6 | Brooklyn Nets | Mikel Brown Jr. | PG | Louisville |
| 7 | Sacramento Kings | Darius Acuff Jr. | PG | Arkansas |
| 8 | Atlanta Hawks | Kingston Flemings | PG | Houston |
| 9 | Dallas Mavericks | Morez Johnson Jr. | PF/C | Michigan |
| 10 | Milwaukee Bucks | Brayden Burries | SG/PG | Arizona |
| 11 | Golden State Warriors | Yaxel Lendeborg | PF | Arizona State |
| 12 | Orlando Magic | Christian Anderson | SG | Texas Tech |
| 13 | Portland Trail Blazers | Bennett Stirtz | SG | Rutgers |
| 14 | New York Knicks | Christian Williams | SG | UCLA |
| 15 | Chicago Bulls | Dailyn Swain | SG | Arizona |
The night will be defined by who maximized their assets and who let value slip away. The Jazz, Spurs, and Pistons clearly understood the market, while the Mavericks, Bulls’ second pick, and Hornets made questionable structural moves that will be scrutinized for years.
