2026 NBA Mock Draft

Clippers Forum » Clipper Blogs

By Max Trueblood

1. WASHINGTON, A.J. DYBANTSA, SF, BYU, 6'9"

I wrestled with this a bit. The Wiz have a ton of wings and their starting 4, AD, is obviously injury prone. Was thinking that breaking in Caleb Wilson or Cam Boozer would work but Dybantsa is clearly the top guy with few question marks

2. UTAH, DARREN PETERSON, 1/2G, KANSAS, 6'5"

This one was tough as well given that Peterson actually questioned going to Utah or Sacramento but he's just too good a fit next to Ace Bailey for this not to work. Utah will work on selling itself to him during the workout and interview process

3. MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES, CAM BOOZER, PF, DUKE, 6'9"

I've actually got Wilson higher on my board but he's a work in progress. I would think Memphis favors someone from a strong family background and high character after the Ja Morant headache

4. CHICAGO BULLS, CALEB WILSON, C/PF, NORTH CAROLINA, 6'10"

Was tempted to go with Illinois' Keaton Wagler here as he's a good fit with the Bulls but that would be too much of a reach. Bulls have options with Wilson. Start him at the pivot from day 1 or at the 4 by moving Buzelis to the 3 then signing someone like Hartenstein in free agency as they have tons of cap space

5. LA CLIPPERS, KINGSTON FLEMINGS, PG, HOUSTON, 6'3"

The Clippers are the big winner of the draft as they not only get a pick but 5 is the best that they could do and they landed it. Wilson is the pick here if he drops but assuming the Bulls take him, the Clips should seriously consider a lead guard as this draft is deep with them and they don't have anyone on the roster other than the oft injured Darius Garland who is a true lead guard

6. BROOKLYN NETS, KEATON WAGLER, 1/2G, ILLINOIS, 6'6"

Good landing spot for Wagler here as he fits right in at the two spot after the Nets drafted a bunch of lead guards last year

7. SACRAMENTO KINGS, DARIUS ACUFF JR., PG, ARKANSAS, 6'3"

Good pick for the Kings. Exciting playmaker will get the joint jumping. The Kings trotted out a bunch of ancient lead guards last season and outside of Devin Carter, nobody is under contract at that spot for the coming season

8. ATLANTA HAWKS, BRADEN BURRIES, 1/2G, ARIZONA, 6'5"

It starts getting tough here. I wasn't enamored with Burries' play during the tournament but he's got tons of fans in the scouting world so I'll role with their analysis. Neither C.J. McCollum nor Gabe Vincent is under contract for next season and Burries can play either guard spot. NBA teams like defensive lead guards better than exciting playmakers nowadays so Burries is the pick

9. DALLAS MAVERICKS, MIKEL BROWN, 1/2G, LOUISVILLE, 6'4"

Dallas has no depth at lead guard for the oft injured and aging Kyrie. They are fine with Burries or Brown and with Burries off the board, Brown looks like the safe pick

10. MILWAUKEE BUCKS, LABARON PHILON, PG, ALABAMA, 6'3"

This one is tough due to nobody knowing what Giannis' status is. For this exercise, we'll assume he's on the roster so the Bucks go with need as they were shuffling lead guards in and out of the equation after letting Damian Lillard go

11. GOLDEN STATE WARRIORS, YAXEL LENDEBOURG, PF, MICHIGAN, 6'10"

Draymond has been talking a lot this offseason so the Warriors need to start thinking about life after the headache. Lendebourg is a good pick here and can even play some pivot in case they lose Kristaps in free agency

12. OKLAHOMA CITY THUNDER, KOA PEAT, PF, ARIZONA, 6'8"

The Thunder would've loved to get Lendebourg here so Presti throws the first big surprise of the night with Peat. OKC really doesn't need anything but the roster is void of bigs and there is a good chance that they don't pick up Hartenstein's option as that would put them well into 2nd apron territory

13. MIAMI HEAT, DAILYN SWAIN, SF, TEXAS, 6'7"

Another tough call here. The Heat have a bunch of free agents and others with player options plus you just never know what type of lineup they will throw out there. Swain could be a good combo forward similar to Andrew Wiggins or former Heater Haywood Highsmith

14. CHARLOTTE HORNETS, KARIM LOPEZ, SF, MEXICO, 6'9"

The roster is getting expensive and that's tough for a small market team. They need to zero in on keeping their trio of Ball, Knueppel and Miller so they're tempted to take a 4 here like Nate Ament but go with wing depth instead

15. CHICAGO BULLS, CAMERON CARR, 2G, BAYLOR, 6'5"

Bulls have nobody under contract at the 2 spot plus Carr is one of the best left on the board regardless of position. Son of below average NBA players usually turn out to be pretty good in the league

16. MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES, AMARI ALLEN, SF, ALABAMA, 6'6"

The Grizz seem to be extremely deep at the guard spots so after going big earlier, they get depth or even a starter at the 3 spot

17. OKLAHOMA CITY THUNDER, ADAY MARA, C, MICHIGAN, 7'4"

Even after going big with the last pick, they do it again given how deep they are on the wings. Mara was a late bloomer who had a great tournament and still has tons of room to grow. OKC is the perfect landing spot as he won't be rushed right away

18. CHARLOTTE HORNETS, PF, NATE AMENT, TENNESSEE, 6'10"

Ament does a bit of a free fall as most pundits have him top 15 but the Hornets go with the best available after taking a perimeter player with the last pick

19. TORONTO RAPTORS, HANNES STEINBACH, C/PF, WASHINGTON, 6'11"

The Raps seem to have someone under contract at each spot in the lineup plus their backup so they go with the best on the board. If nothing else, Steinbach is insurance in case Mamu doesn't pick up his option

20. SAN ANTONIO SPURS, MORIZ JOHNSON, PF/C, MICHIGAN, 6'10"

Good pick for the Spurs here. Johnson can swing as a 4 in big lineups or as Wemby's backup

21. DETROIT PISTONS, ISAIAH EVANS, 2G/SF, DUKE, 6'6"

The Pistons are similar to the Raps where they have someone under contract at all spots as well as the backups so another case of taking the BPA. There is also chatter that they want to improve their outside shooting so Evans is one of the better shooters available

22. PHILADELPHIA 76ERS, CHRISTIAN ANDERSON, PG, TEXAS TECH, 6'2"

The Sixers mysteriously traded away a solid backup point guard in Jared McCain last season so they make up for that blunder by getting a floor leader here

23. ATLANTA HAWKS, CHRIS CENAC, C, HOUSTON, 6'11"

No guarantee that Jock Londale will be back so Hawks get a backup for OO here

24. NEW YORK KNICKS, JAYDEN QUIANTANCE, PF/C, KENTUCKY, 6'10"

Dadiet and Sochan have been dissapointments as backup bigs so the Knicks rectify the situation here

25. LOS ANGELES LAKERS, HENRICK VEESAR, C, NORTH CAROLINA, 7'0"

Deandre Ayton seems to be great on offense but horrible on defense. They may want to upgrade here

26. DENVER NUGGETS, BENNETT STIRTZ, PG, IOWA, 6'3"

The Nugz really didn't have a true backup for Jamal Murray as swingman Bruce Brown seemed to get the majority of those minutes. Stirtz could work well here

27. BOSTON CELTICS, ALEX KARABAN, SF/PF, UCONN, 6'8"

This guy will give the C's a little more size on the front line from the bench. Jordan Walsh is good but at 6'6", seemed overmatched at times playing against bigger players. Being a local guy helps too

28. MINNESOTA TIMBERWOLVES, TYLER TANNER, PG, VANDERBILT, 6'0"

DD may miss the season and Mike Conley is getting old. Not sure if Ayo Dosunmo is cut out for full time duties at lead guard but he'll have to do it so it's important that they have depth here

29. CLEVELAND CAVALIERS, MILAN MOMCILOVIC, SF/PF, IOWA STATE, 6'9"

Cleveland is already well into the 2nd apron so it's doubtful that they can bring back long time favorite Dean Wade. MM is a similar type player and is obviously much cheaper

30. DALLAS MAVERICKS, JOSHUA JEFFERSON, SF/PF, IOWA STATE, 6'9"

How's this for a first. We finish the last two picks of the first round with combo forwards from Iowa State. I bet that's a first

What did Peterson say about Utah or Sacramento?

Can you add height, either for this time, or next time?

Maybe also wingspan if it's worth mentioning, for a certain player.

Whose pick at 16 did Memphis get?

nuraman00 wrote:
What did Peterson say about Utah or Sacramento?

He was worried about the fact that they weren't trying to win and worried about if that would still be the case in the event that he gets drafted by either team

Only one international player? If that's the way it goes, I don't like that.

Seems then like there's less talent, if there aren't any projected top international players.

nuraman00 wrote:
Whose pick at 16 did Memphis get?

Phoenix but not sure what the trade was that brought the pick to them. Dillon Brooks signed as a free agent from Memphis to Houston so it wasn't him

nuraman00 wrote:
Only one international player? If that's the way it goes, I don't like that.

Seems then like there's less talent, if there aren't any projected top international players.

Here's why. A ton of those college players are international players due to NIL. Whereas Aday Mara would've been playing for Real Madrid or Barcelona in the old days, he took the NIL money to play at Michigan

Ditto for Hannes Steinbach. A German native who took the NIL money at Washington

Same with Youseffou and Budinga in the 2nd round

nuraman00 wrote:
Can you add height, either for this time, or next time?

Maybe also wingspan if it's worth mentioning, for a certain player.

I'll do that soon

As far as wingspan, I'm unfortunately not Jay Bilas aka "the wizard of wingspan" so that's gonna be a bit tougher

Trueblood wrote:
I'll do that soon

As far as wingspan, I'm unfortunately not Jay Bilas aka "the wizard of wingspan" so that's gonna be a bit tougher

Thanks. For wingspan, I just meant if it's noticeable. Pre draft, that's what got my attention about Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

Also, can you mention if a draft prospect is a 2nd or 3rd generation NBA player? Or if BOTH parents are athletes. (Playing college or professional sports counts).

There seem to be a few 2nd generation players in every draft, lately.

Even if it's someone high profile, so most people will already know this it's just worth mentioning again that this is a 2nd generation player. Because that probably does help sway some decisions too.

I.E. that player is more likely to have an easier time adjusting to professional life than others.

Can you also note if a player missed time and had longterm injury concerns, or if a player missed time but will be fully healthy to start the NBA season?

Don't have to do this for everyone. Just whatever players you think it's worth mentioning.

Trueblood wrote:
I'll do that soon

As far as wingspan, I'm unfortunately not Jay Bilas aka "the wizard of wingspan" so that's gonna be a bit tougher

Remember how there was no in draft commentary about Jokic, not even a 13 second highlight package?

What makes all of this even more ironic, is that for the next two players picked after Jokic, they spent at least 20 seconds talking about each player.'

They noted one of those guy's wingpan. Bill Simmons, who was one of the broadcast draft commentators, then said he could probably open two car doors at the same time.

nuraman00 wrote:
Thanks. For wingspan, I just meant if it's noticeable. Pre draft, that's what got my attention about Shai Gilgeous-Alexander.

Also, can you mention if a draft prospect is a 2nd or 3rd generation NBA player? Or if BOTH parents are athletes. (Playing college or professional sports counts).

There seem to be a few 2nd generation players in every draft, lately.

Even if it's someone high profile, so most people will already know this it's just worth mentioning again that this is a 2nd generation player. Because that probably does help sway some decisions too.

I.E. that player is more likely to have an easier time adjusting to professional life than others.

The only one that I can think of besides Arenas is Carr who I briefly mentioned in my comment in that sons of below average to average NBA players make for pretty good players. I think Carr's dad was Chris Carr who played for the TWolves in the late 90's, early 2000's

Trueblood wrote:
The only one that I can think of besides Arenas is Carr who I briefly mentioned in my comment in that sons of below average to average NBA players make for pretty good players. I think Carr's dad was Chris Carr who played for the TWolves in the late 90's, early 2000's

Good info. I did not know that was Gilbert Arenas son, in your 2nd round mock.

Also worth adding to your comment in one of these places, for Cameron Boozer, that he's Carlos' son. Because that could influence Utah's pick, so maybe a comment there.

OR, a comment under Cameron himself.

nuraman00 wrote:
Good info. I did not know that was Gilbert Arenas son, in your 2nd round mock.

Also worth adding to your comment in one of these places, for Cameron Boozer, that he's Carlos' son. Because that could influence Utah's pick, so maybe a comment there.

OR, a comment under Cameron himself.

Good catch. He made such a name for himself that you forget his dad played in the league. If not for the State Farm and phone commercials, I would forget that Carlos is his dad

nuraman00 wrote:
Can you also note if a player missed time and had longterm injury concerns, or if a player missed time but will be fully healthy to start the NBA season?

Don't have to do this for everyone. Just whatever players you think it's worth mentioning.

Peterson is the only one that I know about in the first round as he missed a few weeks

On the 2nd round, I mentioned that Richie Saunders could be out for the season

nuraman00 wrote:
Remember how there was no in draft commentary about Jokic, not even a 13 second highlight package?

What makes all of this even more ironic, is that for the next two players picked after Jokic, they spent at least 20 seconds talking about each player.'

They noted one of those guy's wingpan. Bill Simmons, who was one of the broadcast draft commentators, then said he could probably open two car doors at the same time.

I remember that although I don't think it was Simmons who made the comment but rather that international scout guy that they always have on

Trueblood wrote:
Good catch. He made such a name for himself that you forget his dad played in the league. If not for the State Farm and phone commercials, I would forget that Carlos is his dad

Lol. I didn't forget. Partly because I loved Boozer as a player.

I did not like a lot of Jazz fans reactions, who were unhappy that Carlos was an All-Star, because they wanted Deron Williams to be an All-Star. Then when Okur got named an All-Star, they were unhappy again because it wasn't Deron.

Also, I remember one person did change his mind about Carlos, while he was in Utah. When stories came out about Carlos going through a divorce, that person became more sympathetic. Rather than complain about everything Carlos did, he then took a different perspective that this is a real person, who is still playing reasonably well, while navigating some off the court stuff.

I've also always wondered if having twins had anything to do with the divorces of Steve Nash and Carlos Boozer. Since they both had twins, and had divorces, within a few years of each other. And overlapped during those time periods.

So, when Cameron started to make noise as a potential 1st round pick, I was thinking it would be cool if the franchise where his dad played his best ball, also drafted him. So that's what I've been thinking about for several months. And now that the draft lottery is over, you have to think that they might have some insight as to how the Boozers are as a family. Not that everything is always the same, but it could help.

nuraman00 wrote:
Lol. I didn't forget. Partly because I loved Boozer as a player.

I did not like a lot of Jazz fans reactions, who were unhappy that Carlos was an All-Star, because they wanted Deron Williams to be an All-Star. Then when Okur got named an All-Star, they were unhappy again because it wasn't Deron.

Also, I remember one person did change his mind about Carlos, while he was in Utah. When stories came out about Carlos going through a divorce, that person became more sympathetic. Rather than complain about everything Carlos did, he then took a different perspective that this is a real person, who is still playing reasonably well, while navigating some off the court stuff.

I've also always wondered if having twins had anything to do with the divorces of Steve Nash and Carlos Boozer. Since they both had twins, and had divorces, within a few years of each other. And overlapped during those time periods.

So, when Cameron started to make noise as a potential 1st round pick, I was thinking it would be cool if the franchise where his dad played his best ball, also drafted him. So that's what I've been thinking about for several months. And now that the draft lottery is over, you have to think that they might have some insight as to how the Boozers are as a family. Not that everything is always the same, but it could help.

That would be cool but they have Lauri Markannen and JJJ more or less playing his spot. Peterson is a good fit there so he's probably the choice

Added heights to the players line. My personal explanation is this. They were measured yesterday at the combine without shoes. I always round up so if you're 6'0" without shoes, I'll list you at 6'1"

Likewise with 6'0" 1/4 or 6'0" 1/2. I'll still list you at 6'1"

But if you're at 6'2" 3/4, I'll give you an inch and a quarter and call you 6'4"

I am tired of the Clippers being undersized.

And I want a good young PF. Clippers have no one.

I don't want one via trade or free agency, because they won't be young.

Having more depth for Garland won't matter as much for the next few years. A PF can make more impact on this team.

I also wouldn't mind a Center, if you think he'd be a lot better next year than Niederhauser. Otherwise, I'm fine with Niederhauser.

So, who are some PFs you think would fit on this team, and could start quickly, even if they might not be as good as a guard available at that slot?

Yes, I know it's always possible to draft a guard, then trade Garland for a PF. But I don't think there's many good PFs on the trade market either.

Can there be a draft prospect as good as Precious Achiuwa? Maybe not day one, but soon? I know Achiuwa can be signed outright, but again, I want someone young.

I want at least some names, then I can look at their video and decide if it's worth it. Not saying we have to take these potential people, but just trying to think of ways to impact the team. A guard is going to be buried for a while. These are just some names to consider, is all I'm asking.

Why are there so few good foreign prospects? Is this the worst foreign draft class in years?

nuraman00 wrote:
Why are there so few good foreign prospects? Is this the worst foreign draft class in years?
I'm a little shocked at that myself.

pageC4 wrote:
I'm a little shocked at that myself.

Finding the sleeper version of Buzelis for 2026 would be good. He was a G leaguer and not international.

But the point is, no one was talking about him before the draft, and he's turned into a good combo forward.

Wait, @Trueblood had him at #4, and Tankathon had him at #1.

https://www.reddit.com/r/NBA_Draft/comments/14m5pnn/tankathons_first_2024_first_round_mock/

I guess I heard a lot more about Sarr, Knecht, Ron Holland, Edey, Clingan than Buzelis.

Forget about how he compares to other #1 picks. If a team got Buzelis, they'd have gotten a player who is durable, and has made an impact in each season, who is also versatile. You at least know you have a starting caliber player.

Apparently for the Clippers #5 pick it might be between Wagler & Acuff. Both look like good prospects, though Acuff looks a little better with the explosiveness and athleticism. But Wagler does have better size.

david wrote:
Apparently for the Clippers #5 pick it might be between Wagler & Acuff. Both look like good prospects, though Acuff looks a little better with the explosiveness and athleticism. But Wagler does have better size.

I'd go with Acuff but if Lue has any input, he's gonna put pressure on management to go with Flemings due to his defense. I hope I'm wrong but he's not the most creative coach around. Those types usually want defensive players to bail them out due to their lack of setting up a cohesive offensive unit

nuraman00 wrote:
Why are there so few good foreign prospects? Is this the worst foreign draft class in years?

I mentioned it earlier but you may have missed it. There are lots of international players but instead of playing home or some other country abroad, they took the NIL money from American colleges. Therefore, you see Mara playing for Michigan instead of Real Madrid and Hannes Steinbach playing for Washington instead of Bayern Munich

I also have Karim Lopez from Mexico in my mock although he played professionally in New Zealand instead of at an American university

In the 2nd round, there is Sergio De Llarea who did stay in Spain as opposed to take NIL money as well as Luigi Suigo from Italy and Pavle Backo from Serbia

Yessenfou is from Benin but played at Baylor, Bidunga is from the Congo and played at Duke

pageC4 wrote:
I'm a little shocked at that myself.

See my explanation above

nuraman00 wrote:
Finding the sleeper version of Buzelis for 2026 would be good. He was a G leaguer and not international.

But the point is, no one was talking about him before the draft, and he's turned into a good combo forward.

Wait, @Trueblood had him at #4, and Tankathon had him at #1.

https://www.reddit.com/r/NBA_Draft/comments/14m5pnn/tankathons_first_2024_first_round_mock/

I guess I heard a lot more about Sarr, Knecht, Ron Holland, Edey, Clingan than Buzelis.

Forget about how he compares to other #1 picks. If a team got Buzelis, they'd have gotten a player who is durable, and has made an impact in each season, who is also versatile. You at least know you have a starting caliber player.

Keep in mind that Buzelis is actually born and raised in Chicago to Lithuanian immigrant parents. The Chicago area seems to produce a lot of those. American born players from European immigrant parents. There's also Max Strus who was born and raised in the Chicago suburbs to a German father and Slovenian mother

Jon Konchar has a Czech and Hungarian parent as well as a Serbian one as well

This year's foreign sounding player who is actually American born is Milan Momcilovic. Not the Chicago area but close by in Wisconsin

nuraman00 wrote:
I am tired of the Clippers being undersized.

And I want a good young PF. Clippers have no one.

I don't want one via trade or free agency, because they won't be young.

Having more depth for Garland won't matter as much for the next few years. A PF can make more impact on this team.

I also wouldn't mind a Center, if you think he'd be a lot better next year than Niederhauser. Otherwise, I'm fine with Niederhauser.

So, who are some PFs you think would fit on this team, and could start quickly, even if they might not be as good as a guard available at that slot?

Yes, I know it's always possible to draft a guard, then trade Garland for a PF. But I don't think there's many good PFs on the trade market either.

Can there be a draft prospect as good as Precious Achiuwa? Maybe not day one, but soon? I know Achiuwa can be signed outright, but again, I want someone young.

I want at least some names, then I can look at their video and decide if it's worth it. Not saying we have to take these potential people, but just trying to think of ways to impact the team. A guard is going to be buried for a while. These are just some names to consider, is all I'm asking.

There's a very small chance that Caleb Wilson drops to #5. If so, he's the pick by a landslide

If you want them to make a shocking pick that will get ripped by the media but COULD look like a genius pick down the road, you take Lendebourg

There's also the option of trading down with the Hawks. Give them the #5 pick and get #8 and #23 in return. If you do that, you take Lendebourg at 8 then get the best PG on the board which would probably be Bennett Stirtz

Apparently Darius Acuff did very well at the combine:

Quote:

## Physical Measurements

Acuff cleared the "small guard" narrative by measuring over 6 feet barefoot and showcasing elite length for a true point guard. His build draws direct pre-draft physical comparisons to Damian Lillard and a young Russell Westbrook:

  • Height (barefoot): 6'2"

  • Height (with shoes): 6'3.5"

  • Weight: 185.8 lbs

  • Wingspan: 6'7"

  • Standing Reach: 8'2.5"

  • Hand Size: 8.5" length, 9.25" width

## Athletic & Agility Testing

Acuff backed up his measurements by showing elite lateral speed and lower-body explosion:

  • Max Vertical Leap: 36.5 inches

  • No-Step Vertical: 31.5 inches

  • Three-Quarter Court Sprint: 3.06 seconds (tied for the fastest drill time)

  • Lane Agility Drill: 10.99 seconds

  • Shuttle Run: 2.93 seconds

## Shooting Drill Performance

He proved highly efficient during the combine's spot-up and movement shooting portions:

  • Off-the-Dribble Shooting: 80% (24 of 30)

  • Spot-Up 3-Point Shooting: 76% (19 of 25)

  • 3-Point Star Shooting: 52% (13 of 25)

  • Side-Mid-Side Shooting: 50% (13 of 26)

  • Free Throw Drill: 70% (7 of 10)

Keaton Wagler didn't fare as well:

Quote:
Illinois freshman guard Keaton Wagler had a highly scrutinized, mixed showing at the 2026 NBA Draft Combine. While his official measurements raised physical red flags among scouts, his surprising vertical explosion and elite pull-up shooting stabilized his projection as a top-10 lottery pick.

## Physical Measurements

Wagler's measurements caused minor concern regarding his functional length, as his wingspan is significantly shorter than the modern NBA standard for a 6'6" wing or jumbo guard:

  • Height (barefoot): 6'5" (down from his 6'6" college listing)

  • Weight: 188 lbs

  • Wingspan: 6'6.25"

  • Standing Reach: 8'4"

  • Hand Size: 8.0" length, 9.25" width

Note: Scouts noted that a wingspan nearly identical to a player's height can hinder defensive deflections and finishing over length, keeping him more inline with shooting guard dimensions.

## Athletic & Agility Testing

Wagler heavily answered critics who questioned his athleticism. Despite recording zero in-game dunks over 37 games for the Illinois Fighting Illini last season, he displayed surprising leaping ability, though his lateral testing lagged:

  • Standing Vertical Leap: 33.0 inches (Ranked 15th overall)

  • Maximum Vertical: 36.0 inches (Ranked 39th overall)

  • Lane Agility Time: 11.05 seconds (Tied for 35th)

  • Shuttle Run: 3.00 seconds (Ranked 50th)

  • Three-Quarter Sprint: 3.27 seconds

## Shooting Drill Performance

Wagler proved to be one of the premier off-the-bounce threats at the combine, though his standard catch-and-shoot numbers fluctuated:

  • Off-the-Dribble Shooting: 83.3% (25 of 30) (Ranked 4th overall)

  • Spot-Up Shooting: 44% (11 of 25) (Ranked 52nd)

  • 3-Point Star Drill: 48% (12 of 25) (Tied for 35th)

Caleb Wilson did very well:

Quote:
North Carolina forward Caleb Wilson was an absolute standout at the 2026 NBA Draft Combine, validating his tier as a potential franchise-altering talent. After a fractured hand cut his dominant freshman season short, Wilson used Chicago to showcase rare mobility for his size and recorded a massive 94.5 overall combine athleticism score.

## Physical Measurements

Wilson proved he has grown significantly, officially measuring over an inch taller and six pounds heavier than his high school baseline:

  • Height (barefoot): 6'9.25"

  • Weight: 210.8 lbs

  • Wingspan: 7'0.25"

  • Standing Reach: 9'0"

Scouting Take: While his frame remains somewhat slight for an interior player, his 9-foot standing reach paired with dynamic lateral mobility projects him perfectly as a modern, multi-positional NBA combo forward.

## Agility & Athletic Testing

Wilson’s athletic results put him in the upper echelon of modern NBA forwards. He displayed elite straight-line speed and fluid movement during the floor drills:

  • Three-Quarter Court Sprint: 3.24 seconds

  • Pro Lane Agility: Completed with highly praised lateral fluidness and smooth redirection.

## Shooting & Head-to-Head Drills

The biggest question mark surrounding Wilson’s profile was his perimeter jump shot. He answered those concerns by going head-to-head against Duke star Cameron Boozer in the shooting circuits, winning three of the five tracked drills:

  • Combined Shooting (3PT & Off-the-Dribble): Made 31 of 55 shots, notably outperforming Boozer in off-the-bounce rhythm.

  • Spot-Up Shooting: Remained his weakest category, as scouts noted his static catch-and-shoot consistency still requires refinement.

Kingston Flemings had a strong combine too:

Quote:

Houston freshman point guard Kingston Flemings emerged as one of the most fascinating cases of the 2026 NBA Draft Combine. While his physical measurements raised immediate red flags among scouts, his historic explosion in athletic drills and elite shooting numbers solidified his status as a top tier-one guard.

## Physical Measurements

Flemings' official measurements were the biggest surprise of day one, significantly altering the physical expectations for the elite Houston point-of-attack defender:

  • Height (barefoot): 6'2.5" (down from his 6'4" college listing)

  • Weight: 183 lbs

  • Wingspan: 6'3.5"

  • Standing Reach: 8'2.5"

Scouting Take: Measuring with a minimal plus-one wingspan differential ("T-Rex arms") raised questions about his ability to finish in deep paint traffic at the NBA level. However, scouts noted that his elite basketball IQ allowed him to navigate these same limitations while anchoring a dominant Houston Cougars defense.

## Athletic & Agility Testing

Flemings completely erased the measurement anxiety on day two by torching the floor drills, finishing near the very top of almost every athletic event: [1, 3]

  • Max Vertical Jump: 40.5 inches (ranked 2nd overall at the combine)

  • No-Step Vertical: 33.5 inches

  • Shuttle Run: 2.69 seconds (ranked 2nd overall)

  • Three-Quarter Court Sprint: 3.07 seconds (tied for 2nd)

  • Pro Lane Agility: Top-5 overall finish

## Shooting Drill Performance

Perimeter shooting was the main swing-skill question for Flemings entering the week, but he answered critics with a stellar shooting display:

  • 3-Point Star Drill: 76% (19 of 25) �" Finished 1st overall in the entire combine field.

  • Spot-Up 3-Point Shooting: 60% (15 of 25)

  • Off-the-Dribble Shooting: Finished 2nd overall in accuracy during the live circuit.

david wrote:
Apparently Darius Acuff did very well at the combine:

Great job David! We can zero in on Clipper possibilities with the way you broke it down

Not to be the lottery grinch but wouldn't that be something if the Aspiration punishment turns out to be voiding this year's pick? With all the garbage hanging over our heads right now, that might not be the worst thing in the world although it would be quite disappointing

Trueblood wrote:
Great job David! We can zero in on Clipper possibilities with the way you broke it down

Not to be the lottery grinch but wouldn't that be something if the Aspiration punishment turns out to be voiding this year's pick? With all the garbage hanging over our heads right now, that might not be the worst thing in the world although it would be quite disappointing

I was thinking about that too.

I was also thinking about whether Kevin had gotten Pritch Slapped before, and it would be when Portland tried to claim a medical retirement for Darius Miles in 2008.

Miles would then play at least the minimum 10 games in 2008 - 2009, thus putting Miles' contract back on Portland's books.

nuraman00 wrote:
I was thinking about that too.

I was also thinking about whether Kevin had gotten Pritch Slapped before, and it would be when Portland tried to claim a medical retirement for Darius Miles in 2008.

Miles would then play at least the minimum 10 games in 2008 - 2009, thus putting Miles' contract back on Portland's books.

I'm sure there are other ones that I can't think of off the bat but yeah, getting Mathurin, Jackson and the #5 for Zu is looking better and better all the time unless of course my nightmare scenario comes to fruition

OTOH, there was a certain amount of luck involved too. If the league were to void a pick that we basically had a coin flip chance of getting in the first place, is it really that big of a loss in the first place? And if it turns out to be the entirety of the punishment then even better

That being said, I'd prefer to have no punishment at all. After all, and as I've said before, they were already paying Kawhi too much as it was. Anything beyond what they were paying was just stupid money

Trueblood wrote:
Great job David! We can zero in on Clipper possibilities with the way you broke it down

Not to be the lottery grinch but wouldn't that be something if the Aspiration punishment turns out to be voiding this year's pick? With all the garbage hanging over our heads right now, that might not be the worst thing in the world although it would be quite disappointing

Thanks! Gotta give most of the credit to Google though lol.

I'd be shocked if the Clipper pick were voided. Even if there was wrongdoing, something so punitive like voiding a top 5 pick doesn't seem appropriate. Perhaps the worst would be voiding KL's contract. I'm guessing the investigation concludes that the Clippers didn't do anything out of bounds.

david wrote:
Thanks! Gotta give most of the credit to Google though lol.

I'd be shocked if the Clipper pick were voided. Even if there was wrongdoing, something so punitive like voiding a top 5 pick doesn't seem appropriate. Perhaps the worst would be voiding KL's contract. I'm guessing the investigation concludes that the Clippers didn't do anything out of bounds.

Voiding the contract would be doing them a favor though. There are gonna be other owners and fans of small market teams that are gonna be angry that nothing is happening to the Clips then if a bad contract comes off the books, they will see it as doing them a favor on top of that. I agree with your reasoning but just not sure if the league is willing to go in that direction

The punishment should probably be the same, whether its a "bad" contract or not. Because that is always subjective.

So in other cases, like the Joe Smith one, its draft picks, then it should still be draft picks.

In the Juwan Howard case, the Heat GM messed up in the cap space calculations, and the NBA office voided it. He hadn't actually played any games or done anything official as a Heat, so it was probably an easier punishment to administer.

In this Leonard case, he's already been under contract, so it's different.

Have we had other examples where someone was under contract, and then later found guilty?

nuraman00 wrote:
The punishment should probably be the same, whether its a "bad" contract or not. Because that is always subjective.

So in other cases, like the Joe Smith one, its draft picks, then it should still be draft picks.

In the Juwan Howard case, the Heat GM messed up in the cap space calculations, and the NBA office voided it. He hadn't actually played any games or done anything official as a Heat, so it was probably an easier punishment to administer.

In this Leonard case, he's already been under contract, so it's different.

Have we had other examples where someone was under contract, and then later found guilty?

Good question. I know of someone who SHOULD'VE been found guilty. KD due to Draymond actively recruiting him on social media

Trueblood wrote:
Good question. I know of someone who SHOULD'VE been found guilty. KD due to Draymond actively recruiting him on social media

Do we have the tweet or IG post where he did that? Or did someone save a screen shot of it?

I'm a die hard Zona fan, and I watch every game on TV. So, I got to see a bunch of the projected 1st Round picks play last year. A few of these guys impressed me, but I REALLY like Chris Cenac Jr, and I think he can be the next Triple J. Also, with the weird culture of only evaluating one side of the court, I feel like people miss out on great players too often today. ANYONE who plays well for Kelvin Sampson should get at least a second look. I would not be opposed to trading down, getting more assets to replace missing draft capital in the future, and taking Cenac. Who knows, maybe there's a deal that allows us to trade down far enough to get another first rounder? I also like Ament. To me, he looks like... what if SloMo could shoot the ball? Optimally, I want to cut a deal that lands us those 2, Cenac n' Ament. The Darius Garland deal was extremely annoying. Now, we're going to get killed by every primary ball handler in the West. That's not how you build a championship contender in today's landscape. Unless we trade him, there's zero sense in drafting Acuff, Flemings, Burries and Bradley (Who I am rooting for - Bear Down), Philon, Christian Anderson, Uzan, Braden Smith, Boswell (Formerly Bear Down AND my Uso... Afakasi Samoan), or Cadeau. I'd love to break the team down completely and go full Brooklyn last season.... like 5 First Rounders along with our pair of 2nd Rounders. I met Tounde a couple times, and he seems a really great kid. Very friendly, very positive kid. One of my best friends trained him all through HS at St. Joe's in Santa Maria. I'm actually rooting for him even harder than....

LuvMeSumMEE wrote:
I'm a die hard Zona fan, and I watch every game on TV. So, I got to see a bunch of the projected 1st Round picks play last year. A few of these guys impressed me, but I REALLY like Chris Cenac Jr, and I think he can be the next Triple J. Also, with the weird culture of only evaluating one side of the court, I feel like people miss out on great players too often today. ANYONE who plays well for Kelvin Sampson should get at least a second look. I would not be opposed to trading down, getting more assets to replace missing draft capital in the future, and taking Cenac. Who knows, maybe there's a deal that allows us to trade down far enough to get another first rounder?

I also like Ament. To me, he looks like... what if SloMo could shoot the ball? Optimally, I want to cut a deal that lands us those 2, Cenac n' Ament. The Darius Garland deal was extremely annoying. Now, we're going to get killed by every primary ball handler in the West. That's not how you build a championship contender in today's landscape. Unless we trade him, there's zero sense in drafting Acuff, Flemings, Burries and Bradley (Who I am rooting for - Bear Down), Philon, Christian Anderson, Uzan, Braden Smith, Boswell (Formerly Bear Down AND my Uso... Afakasi Samoan), or Cadeau. I'd love to break the team down completely and go full Brooklyn last season.... like 5 First Rounders along with our pair of 2nd Rounders.

I met Tounde a couple times, and he seems a really great kid. Very friendly, very positive kid. One of my best friends trained him all through HS at St. Joe's in Santa Maria. I'm actually rooting for him even harder than all my Wildcats in this draft. He didn't have the year he was expected to have. I think he should've stayed another season, but if he's around at 36... we should do it. Kid is a serious athlete, and he works HARD. I'm confident the shot will come around. Just think... twitchier Lou Dort who can actually play basketball... rather than hurt people and make occasional threes.

Create a bigger team to combat all the size in OKC, SA, MIN, DEN, HOU, LWord, and what is building in POR, PHX, and MEM...

Great writeup. Appreciated. My trade down with the Hawks COULD net Ament and Cenac but it would be a tight squeeze. That would mean 8 & 23. You could definitely get Ament at 8 but not sure if Cenac would still be around at 23. That would be the risky part of the trade

nuraman00 wrote:
Do we have the tweet or IG post where he did that? Or did someone save a screen shot of it?

I think there may have been but I don't have access to it

Trueblood wrote:
Great writeup. Appreciated. My trade down with the Hawks COULD net Ament and Cenac but it would be a tight squeeze. That would mean 8 & 23. You could definitely get Ament at 8 but not sure if Cenac would still be around at 23. That would be the risky part of the trade

Yeah, I think Cenac is performing himself right out of the mid 1st. I think he's going higher than he was initially projected. I think it might take a few years, but Ament could be a player.

I want a huge team that plays defense. I think we should look into large wings for those 2nd round picks. Maybe we can get Baba Miller to shoot the ball better?

Dillon Mitchell has been looking bouncy and explosive in the Combine highlights. I'm trying to think of guys who might be around for that pair of 2nds.

I read somewhere that Malachi Moreno is on the radar for that last pick. I don't hate that. Who knows if it's true. I just see stuff on X and blindly believe it, LoL.

Last year, my favorite was Yaxel Lendeborg, but he's not a sleeper AT ALL now that he transferred to Michigan and won the Natty....

Before the Zu trade, my favorite was Magoon Gwath. He's going back to school Sad Maybe next year, I think he's still a sleeper at this time in 2027 Smile

LuvMeSumMEE wrote:
Yeah, I think Cenac is performing himself right out of the mid 1st. I think he's going higher than he was initially projected. I think it might take a few years, but Ament could be a player.

I want a huge team that plays defense. I think we should look into large wings for those 2nd round picks. Maybe we can get Baba Miller to shoot the ball better?

Dillon Mitchell has been looking bouncy and explosive in the Combine highlights. I'm trying to think of guys who might be around for that pair of 2nds.

I read somewhere that Malachi Moreno is on the radar for that last pick. I don't hate that. Who knows if it's true. I just see stuff on X and blindly believe it, LoL.

Last year, my favorite was Yaxel Lendeborg, but he's not a sleeper AT ALL now that he transferred to Michigan and won the Natty....

Before the Zu trade, my favorite was Magoon Gwath. He's going back to school Sad Maybe next year, I think he's still a sleeper at this time in 2027 Smile

I had Dillon Mitchell going 31st or 32nd so he'd be off the board for the Clippers early 2nd round pick but not that many people are that high on Mitchell. He will probably still be on the board for the 36th pick

I was a huge Yaxel fan too. Great choice to stay in school. I'm hoping more and more players stay and take the NIL money and hopefully become better players as well. Which reminds me that the #8 and #23 could get Yaxel in the mix. Maybe take him at #8 instead of Ament and then go with a lead guard at 23

I never got around to pulling the trigger on Baba in my 2nd round. He'll definitely go at some point or maybe even sneak into the late 1st

If Moreno is around for the late 2nd rounder then go for it but I wouldn't take him with the 36

Momcilovic, Amari Allen and Tyler Tanner are pulling out of the draft. Not sure if Momcilovic and Tanner are returning to Iowa State and Vanderbilt respectively or are part of the transfer portal

Allen is returning to Alabama

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