
The Wizards are likely tanking for the final time in the rebuild and will have a stacked class of prospects to choose from. The 2026 draft arguably has the best top three in draft history: Darryn Peterson, AJ Dybantsa, and Cameron Boozer.
But last year taught fans that the lottery gods may not always bless them. The Wizards should be prepared for all possibilities. With that in mind, who are Washington’s best options at each draft spot?
Peterson is the best guard prospect the league has seen in years. He’s a 6-foot-5 combo guard who overwhelms defenders with a combination of size, fluidity, and overall skill that cannot be contained. Peterson’s stock rose among scouts in his senior year in high school.
Injuries have limited Peterson early in his college career, but his production while on the court is undeniable. Through his first eight games, he’s averaged 22.6 points on excellent efficiency.
Here’s my scouting report on the 2nd highest rated player on my board, Darryn Peterson. pic.twitter.com/avZviyYXSA
— Akilesh Swamy (@swamy_akilesh) January 4, 2026
Dybantsa is among the favorites to be the first pick this summer. He’s incredibly appealing as a prospect, as a smooth 6-foot-9 shot creator. He is extremely fluid for his size and has been at the top of his class for years. The Massachusetts native has concerns with his shooting numbers and low defensive playmaking stats, but Dybantsa fits seamlessly into every team’s system.
Elite company
@AJ_Dybantsa pic.twitter.com/bAI0dRKoS9
— NCAA March Madness (@MarchMadnessMBB) January 11, 2026
Boozer is the third of the elite prospects from this class. Boozer will have the more boring playstyle and fewer highlight plays than the others, but he simply wins. From high school, to EYBL, to college, Boozer has done nothing but dominate. The 6-foot-9 forward is one of the strongest players in the world, but still has a threatening jumper. Boozer would instantly create one of the best big duos with Alex Sarr, but there are questions surrounding his self-creation skills.
Cam Boozer’s early-season output for Duke has him in a league of his own.
Relative to the last 5 NPOY winners, Boozer is outperforming in all impact & efficiency metrics — a profile tracking towards historic territory. pic.twitter.com/dzZCeuAOMr
— Mohamed (@mcfNBA) January 8, 2026
Caleb Wilson has run away as the consensus No. 4 prospect. Wilson is a force on both ends and would join Sarr in a defensive-minded frontcourt. The North Carolina forward is an elite player in the paint — talented as a rim protector and off-ball scorer. While he is a talented passer, he struggles to create for himself and has shown weaknesses defending on the perimeter. Wilson’s floor is high, but he likely isn’t a high-ceiling player who could become the best player on a championship contender.
Caleb Wilson. Good at basketball. pic.twitter.com/EVKXlANYnp
— NBA Draft Dude
(@CoreyTulaba) January 8, 2026
Kingston Flemings, Mikel Brown Jr., and Labaron Philon are three elite point guards who will likely be drafted within the top 10. Flemings has emerged as the second-best guard prospect. He is a strong defender from Houston, who can get inside at will due to his athleticism, but also a scary shooter. Brown has been very rough in an injury-riddled freshman season for Louisville. He is still great in the pick-and-roll and was the best player in the FIBA U19 Tournament last summer.
Kingston Flemings Quick Hit Scout:
A strong, twitchy 6'4" guard with high feel. An absolute blur in transition with an insanely quick first-step burst in the halfcourt. If he gets a step on his defender, especially going right, it’s almost a guaranteed paint touch. Once he… pic.twitter.com/ql8pyH8flo
— NBA Draft Dude
(@CoreyTulaba) December 31, 2025
Philon’s stock has risen drastically in his sophomore year at Alabama. He is still a raw prospect, but he’s very sound, consistently making the right decision offensively while being crafty with the ball.
Labaron Philon puts up a career-high night against Mississippi State:
32 PTS | 10-14 FG | 3-5 3PT | 4 REB | 3 AST pic.twitter.com/yKW4cr2VoB
— B/R Hoops (@brhoops) January 14, 2026
Hannes Steinbach and Koa Peat have also increased their draft stock over the last few months. They could be potential candidates if the Wizards fall far in the lottery.
Jayden Quintance is another sophomore who could land in the upper end of the lottery. Quintance is coming off a torn ACL and transferred to Kentucky over the offseason. Though only playing four games as a Wildcat, he’s establishing himself as the class’s best rim protector and defender. Nate Ament is another likely lottery pick, and the hometown guy, growing up 45 minutes from DC. His fit next to Sarr wouldn’t be great, but he is a long wing with creation skills.
for me, jayden quaintance is a 10/10 athlete who will walk into the NBA as a top-tier athletic talent, assuming he's ok health-wise
legendary combination of vertical/horizontal burst, functional strength, flexibility, agility/COD as a 6’10ish big https://t.co/eJHbDwgPhp pic.twitter.com/luixesIeC8
— Ben Pfeifer (@bjpf_) December 8, 2025
Washington will need to remain in the bottom four to guarantee it keeps its pick. The Wizards’ pick is top eight protected, and they are hoping for the best odds against Indiana, Atlanta, and Sacramento. With Trae Young likely sidelined a majority of the season, Washington is doing all it can to get a franchise-changing pick this draft.
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