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2026 NBA draft: Washington Wizards select AJ Dybantsa with the No. 1 pick
NEW YORK —
The Washington Wizards selected forward AJ Dybantsa, who led the nation in scoring in his one season at BYU, with the No. 1 pick in the NBA draft on Tuesday night.
Full list of players selected in the first round of the NBA draft below.
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Dybantsa averaged 25.5 points, highlighted by a 43-point effort that broke BYU’s freshman scoring record. He was the first of eight straight college freshman taken to begin the draft.
At 6-foot-9 and 217 pounds, Dybantsa has drawn comparisons to Kevin Durant, who happens to be his favorite player. Durant grew up in the Washington area, and Wizards fans can only hope Dybantsa can live up to the comparisons.
They certainly hope he will be better than center Kwame Brown, the pick Washington made in 2001, the first time it had the No. 1 selection after the NBA changed draft formats to eliminate territorial picks in 1966. The Wizards took John Wall in 2010 the other time, and he did turn into an All-Star.
He appeared to say a quick prayer after his name was announced, then went on stage to greet Commissioner Adam Silver and slipped on a black Wizards hat that matched nicely with his black suit.
Dybantsa beat out fellow freshman Darryn Peterson of Kansas, who was taken at the No. 2 pick by Utah. While some thought Peterson had the most talent in the class, the guard missed 11 games during the season because of injuries and illness, potentially creating some questions that Dybantsa didn’t have.
Cameron Boozer, the college player of the year in his one season at Duke, was taken at No. 3 by Memphis. Caleb Wilson, another freshman forward from rival North Carolina, went to Chicago with the next pick.
Those players were the expected top four throughout the pre-draft process, though there was certainly a case for Peterson to go first with his promise. Or for Boozer, with his body of work after he put up 22.5 points, 10.2 rebounds and 4.1 assists per game for Duke, where his father, Carlos, also played before becoming a two-time NBA All-Star.
The uncertainty was expected to begin at No. 5. The Los Angeles Clippers acquired the rights to it after a trade with the Indiana Pacers and used it on Illinois guard Keaton Wagler. The host Brooklyn Nets then went with Louisville guard Mikel Brown Jr.
Darius Acuff Jr. to Sacramento at No. 7 and Kingston Flemings to Atlanta at No. 8 continued the run of scoring guards before Dallas went back to the bigs — and created a reunion in the process — by taking Morez Johnson Jr. from Michigan. Johnson was congratulated by national champion Michigan teammates Yaxel Lendeborg and Aday Mara, who were also in the green room, and then hugged his old and new coach. Dusty May left the Wolverines to coach the Mavericks on the eve of the draft.
The draft is always a celebration, when all teams have hope, but the cheers seemed even more frequent than usual. They began when Silver opened his remarks by hailing the NBA champion Knicks and NBA Finals MVP Jalen Brunson, with a number of fans in Barclays Center wearing Knicks jerseys. Nets fans, who endured a miserable season watching the home team in the arena, applauded the selection of Brown, who had a 45-point performance to highlight his season that was cut short by a back injury.
The players selected in the first round of the NBA draft Tuesday night in New York:
- Washington Wizards – AJ Dybantsa, BYU forward
- Utah Jazz – Darryn Peterson, Kansas guard
- Memphis Grizzlies – Cameron Boozer, Duke forward
- Chicago Bulls – Caleb Wilson, North Carolina forward
- Los Angeles Clippers – Keaton Wagler, Illinois guard
- Brooklyn Nets – Mikel Brown Jr., Louisville guard
- Sacramento Kings – Darius Acuff Jr., Arkansas guard
- Atlanta Hawks – Kingston Flemings, Houston guard
- Dallas Mavericks – Morez Johnson Jr., Michigan forward
- Milwaukee Bucks – Brayden Burries, Arizona guard
- Golden State Warriors – Yaxel Lendeborg, Michigan forward
- Oklahoma City Thunder – Aday Mara, Michigan center
- Miami Heat – Nate Ament, Tennessee forward
- Charlotte Hornets – Hannes Steinbach, Washington forward
- Chicago Bulls – Dailyn Swain, Texas guard
- Memphis Grizzlies – Bennett Stirtz, Iowa guard
- Oklahoma City Thunder –
- Charlotte Hornets –
- Toronto Raptors –
- San Antonio Spurs –
- Detroit Pistons –
- Philadelphia 76ers –
- Atlanta Hawks –
- New York Knicks –
- Los Angeles Lakers –
- Denver Nuggets –
- Boston Celtics –
- Minnesota Timberwolves –
- Cleveland Cavaliers –
- Dallas Mavericks –



