JJ-Sports > Basketball > 2026 mock draft: Nets No. 1 pick Peterson, Wizards No. 2 pick DiBanza, Jazz No. 2 pick Boozer

2026 mock draft: Nets No. 1 pick Peterson, Wizards No. 2 pick DiBanza, Jazz No. 2 pick Boozer

November 23 As the new NCAA season begins, ESPN draft expert Jeremy Woo released the latest 2026 mock draft list. Among them, Darin Peterson beat Dibansa and was selected as the No. 1 pick to join the Nets. The Wizards picked Dibansa and the Jazz selected Boozer with the third overall pick.

First Round

1. Nets Darin Peterson guard Kansas

2. Wizards AJ Dibansa small forward Brigham Young

3. Jazz Cameron Boozer inside Duke

4. Pacers Nate Ament forward Tennessee

5. Old Eagles (Pelicans) Caleb Wilson inside North Carolina

6, Kings Mikel Brown Jr. point guard Louisville

7, Hornets Chris Cenac Jr. inside Houston

8, Mavericks Koa Pitt inside Arizona

9, Grizzlies Jaden Quintans mid Forward Kentucky

10, Thunder (Clippers) Dam Sarr wing Duke Italy

11, Grizzlies (Suns) Kareem Lopez forward New Zealand destroyer Mexico

12, Trail Blazers Neocris Avdalas wing Virginia Tech Greece

13. Bulls Braylon Mullins shooting guard Connecticut

14. Bucks Darius Acuff Jr. point guard Arkansas

15. Celtics forward Thomas Howe Florida

16. Raptors point guard Rabalon Philon Jr. Alabama

17. Hornets (Magic) Tunde Yesufo wing Baylor Benin

18, Warriors Jacel Lundberg inside Michigan Dominican

19, Heat Kingston Flemings point guard Houston

20, Timberwolves Bennett Stites point guard Iowa

21, Spurs Hannes Steinbach inside Washington Germany

22, Pistons Isaiah Evans shooting guard Duke

23, Thunder (76ers) guard Dash Daniels Melbourne United Australia

24, Cavaliers (Hawks) Adai Mara center Michigan Spain

25. Lakers Zuby Ejofor inside St. John

26. Knicks Miles Bird wing San Diego State

27. Hawks (Cavaliers) Milik Thomas guard Arkansas

28. Thunder (Rockets) Alex Condon center Florida

29. Nuggets Joseph Tugler inside Houston

30. Wizards (Thunder) Dwayne Aristote small forward Arizona Holland

Second round

31. Nets Sergio de La Rea guard Valencia Spain

32. Knicks (Wizards) Patrick Ngomba center Duke

33, Spurs (Jazz) Nicholas Hamenya forward Duke Belarus

34, Grizzlies (Pacers) Cameron Carr wing Baylor

35, Celtics (Pelicans) Brayden Smith point guard Purdue

36, Kings JT Toppin, Texas Tech

37, Kings (Hornets) Carter Knox, wing Arkansas

38, Thunder (Mavericks) Alex Karaban, forward Connecticut

39, Clippers (Grizzlies) Tahad Pettiford, point guard Auburn

40, Nets (Clippers) Henry Vissar center North Carolina Estonia

41, Wizards (Suns) Margon Gervais center San Diego State South Sudan

42, Spurs (Trail Blazers) Paul McNeil Jr. shooting guard North Carolina State

43, Fire Arrows (Bulls) Tomislav Ivesic center Illinois Croatia

44, Celtics (Bucks) Darion Williams small forward North Carolina State

45, Hawks (Celtics) Brayden Burris shooting guard Arizona

46, Raptors Wesley Yates Third-generation shooting guard Washington

47, Magic center Motyjus Karivas of Arizona Lithuania

48, Hornets (Warriors) Milos Uzan point guard Houston

49, Spurs (Heat) Andrei Stojakovic wing Illinois Serbia/Greece

50, Wizards (Timberwolves) Mohamed Sirah center Georgia Tech Senegal

51, Timberwolves (Spurs) Adam Adonna shooting guard Aswell France

52, Knicks (Pistons) Delin Swain wing Texas

53, Suns (76 People) Moretz Johnson Jr. inside Michigan

54, Nets (Hawks) Mustafa Thiam center Cincinnati Senegal

55, Raptors (Lakers) Michael Ruzic inside Juventus Croatia

56, Knicks Boogie Forlan point guard Flory Da

57, Cavaliers Rich Sanders flanks Brigham Young

58, Rockets Nolan Winter inside Wisconsin

59, Timberwolves (Nuggets) Solo Ball shooting guard Connecticut

60, Wizards (Thunder) Tucker DeVries flanks Indiana

source:7n cm