Peterson takes #1, Giannis trade looms, and Congress sets a June 18 markup

Peterson takes #1, Giannis trade looms, and Congress sets a June 18 markup

SB Nation's Ricky O'Donnell became the first major analyst to flip Darryn Peterson to #1 overall ahead of AJ Dybantsa, while KOC's Mock Draft 8.0 bumped Cameron Boozer to #2 — both cracks in the consensus just eight days before the June 23–24 NBA Draft. On Capitol Hill, the Senate Commerce Committee scheduled a June 18 markup of the Protect College Sports Act, with the NCAA separately warning that the bill's Section 123 would override the Brendan Sorsby eligibility ruling. Program updates include George Mason's historic six-year extension for Tony Skinn and Kentucky's pursuit of Barcelona prospect Nikola Kusturica for its final scholarship slot.

NCAA Basketball & March Madness
15/6/2026 · 22:35
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NCAA basketball weekly roundup — June 8–15, 2026.
Eight days out from the NBA Draft, the mock-draft consensus that had held AJ Dybantsa comfortably at #1 finally cracked. On Capitol Hill, the Protect College Sports Act moved from hearing to markup with a concrete date and a summer deadline. And across the college basketball landscape, a George Mason alum locked in the longest contract in program history while Kentucky's final scholarship slot is now being contested from Barcelona.

Mock drafts: Peterson steals the #1 spot for the first time

SB Nation's Ricky O'Donnell published the week's most provocative mock on June 14, flipping Darryn Peterson (Kansas) to #1 for the Washington Wizards and sliding BYU's AJ Dybantsa to #2. 1 In a pool of eight credible mocks published June 9–14, it's the only one to move Dybantsa off the top spot. 2 O'Donnell's argument: Dybantsa raises too many questions outside of scoring. "I honestly haven't seen too many boards with him at No. 1 outside of Jeremy Woo at ESPN and Sam Vecenie at The Athletic," O'Donnell wrote. "For most people, either Cameron Boozer or Darryn Peterson is the best player available." 1
Kevin O'Connor's Mock Draft 8.0, published June 11 at Yahoo Sports, made its own statement: he moved Cameron Boozer (Duke) from #3 to #2 for the Utah Jazz, dropping Peterson to #3. 3 "I'm moving Boozer into this slot, and it's not based on any intel at all. It's just a gut feeling based on history," O'Connor wrote, drawing a parallel to 2017 when Danny Ainge (now Jazz GM Austin Ainge's father) traded the #1 pick away rather than take a consensus favorite at the top. O'Connor's case against Peterson is pointed: the Kansas guard missed 11 of 35 games, including sitting out the biggest game of his season against undefeated Arizona with flu-like symptoms — and O'Connor noted Peterson's own description of himself as an "anti-social loner." 3 Boozer, in O'Connor's framing, is the insurance pick: the Naismith Award winner, 22.5 points and 10.2 rebounds per game at Duke, 39.1% from three, "one of the greatest college freshmen in recent history." 3
Here's how the top four landed across the eight mocks that published this week:
PickVecenie (6/10)KOC 8.0 (6/11)Buckley/BR (6/11)Finkelstein/CBS (6/9)SI (6/11)SB Nation (6/14)HoopsHype Agg. (6/11)
1 — WizardsDybantsaDybantsaDybantsaDybantsaDybantsaPetersonDybantsa
2 — JazzPetersonBoozerPetersonPetersonPetersonDybantsaPeterson
3 — GrizzliesBoozerPetersonBoozer → OKCBoozerBoozerBoozerBoozer
4 — BullsWilsonWilsonWilsonWilsonWilsonWilsonWilson
Caleb Wilson at #4 is the draft's most stable position — every mock agrees, no dissent. Everything above him is in flux.
The Giannis shadow: Bleacher Report's Zach Buckley laid out the week's most talked-about hypothetical: a three-team deal that would send Jalen Williams (Oklahoma City Thunder's star forward who carries a five-year, $239.3 million extension kicking in next season) to Detroit, land Boozer and a package of picks and swaps for OKC, and reload Memphis with young defenders and picks. 5 The financial pressure is real: ESPN's Anthony Slater and Tim MacMahon estimated OKC's 2026-27 salary commitment at $250.5 million, which "would trigger a more than $200 million tax bill." 5 Meanwhile, the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade conversation is dominating draft-night scenarios. Miami is widely seen as the frontrunner destination, and the Bucks have been signaling to the league that they could have multiple first-round picks available on draft night. 3 ESPN's Shams Charania, as quoted by Bleacher Report, summed up the Milwaukee dynamic bluntly: "When your best player is one foot in, one foot out, you're not going to win." 5
Cameron Boozer (#12, Duke) reacts during the NCAA Tournament Sweet Sixteen — the freshman at the center of the #2 pick debate
Cameron Boozer during the 2026 NCAA Tournament — Naismith Award winner, 22.5 PPG, and the player KOC moved to #2 over Peterson 5
Brayden Burries and the Klutch factor: Three independent sources this week confirmed what has become the draft's worst-kept secret — Arizona guard Brayden Burries (16.1 points per game, 39.1% from three, represented by Klutch Sports' Rich Paul) has limited his workout appearances in what reads as a deliberate effort to land at Dallas #9. CBS Sports' Adam Finkelstein wrote: "There's a growing belief that this could be a scenario that both Burries and Dallas would be excited about, and even some speculation that's why Burries is not working out for more teams." 6 Klutch used the same playbook in 2023 to steer Dereck Lively to Dallas at #12.
Illinois guard Keaton Wagler — the 39.7% three-point shooter who scored 46 on Purdue in the tournament — is the lottery's most uncertain case. KOC reported that league sources say the Clippers are not "in love" with taking him at #5, and Wagler's camp canceled a scheduled workout with the Brooklyn Nets (#6). 3 He ranges from #5 to #9 across this week's mocks, but a canceled workout can also signal a higher promise in hand.
Michigan's champion haul: Every major mock projects three Wolverines going in the first round — center Aday Mara (7-3, Spain) in the #8–#21 range, forward Yaxel Lendeborg in the #11–#14 range, and forward Morez Johnson Jr. at #14 in multiple mocks. HoopsHype's sources said to "expect all three Michigan players off the board by pick 15." 2 O'Connor, on Johnson: "You know the guy on a championship team who never gets enough credit nationally? … That's Morez Johnson." 3

Congress sets a date: markup on June 18

The Protect College Sports Act moved from talk to timetable this week. Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Ted Cruz (R-TX) scheduled a full-committee Executive Session for June 18 at 10:00 AM ET in Russell 253, putting the bill up for amendment and a committee vote. 8 9 Trump has publicly pushed for passage before summer; Cruz said his goal is "before the beginning of the school year." 10
MTSU head coach Derek Mason, TSU President James Crawford III, Sen. Ted Cruz, and Memphis head coach Charles Huff speaking after the June 10 college sports roundtable on Capitol Hill
Derek Mason (MTSU), TSU president James Crawford III, Sen. Cruz, and Memphis HC Charles Huff after the June 10 roundtable — an unlikely coalition of coaches and senators 10
The week produced a set of cross-cutting alliances that don't fit normal political categories. On June 10, Cruz assembled a roundtable that included Derek Mason (Middle Tennessee State head coach), Charles Huff (Memphis head coach), and TSU president James Crawford III alongside Democratic senators Cantwell and Coons. Mason called college sports a "Hunger Games" environment; Huff said agents are "preying on the naivete" of young athletes. 10 Republican Sen. Bernie Moreno (OH) and Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy (CT) ended up on the same opposition side — for completely different reasons. Moreno wants narrower antitrust protections and an explicit ban on males competing in women's sports; Murphy argues the bill "gives the NCAA an antitrust exemption that no other industry gets just so they can keep underpaying the athletes." 10
The Big Ten and SEC sat in on separate ~30-minute calls with Cruz, Cantwell, and Schmitt on June 10 and came away still opposed to the current draft, though both conferences said they want agent provisions and are targeting a December 1 passage before the football transfer portal opens. 11 The ACC, Big 12, American Athletic, Pac-12, and Conference USA are supportive. Outside legal counsel's read on the bill's odds: roughly 50-50. Jason Montgomery of Husch Blackwell said, "I tend to think anything that's not done by August isn't going to get done." 10
What the NCAA needs: On June 9, NCAA President Charlie Baker sent member schools a letter identifying five areas where the bill needs amendment: broader state-law preemption, a clarification that revenue-sharing arrangements don't require College Sports Commission approval, sport-specific transfer windows rather than a universal five-week window, federal courts as the exclusive venue for eligibility and transfer suits, and a shift in women's and Olympic sports protection from guaranteed scholarship counts to guaranteed numbers of sponsored teams. 12 Baker wrote, "We are running out of time, and this bipartisan bill is the best chance to ensure college sports will continue to thrive for all 550,000 current college athletes and for years to come." 12
One provision is generating its own separate fight inside the markup. The NCAA sent DI commissioners a letter on June 12 warning that Section 123 of the bill — which applies the law retroactively to any pending action — would override the Brendan Sorsby eligibility ruling. Sorsby is a Texas Tech quarterback who was granted a court injunction to play in 2026 after admitting to thousands of sports-betting transactions while on the roster. The NCAA wrote, "We understand there is an effort to strip this element from the bill before the mark up next week," and urged commissioners to push sponsors to keep it in. 13 Whether Section 123 survives the June 18 markup intact is the single most consequential amendment question on the agenda.

Five-for-five eligibility reform: vote still on track

The NCAA's new age-based eligibility model — five seasons of competition within a five-year consecutive window — is moving toward a formal DI Cabinet vote around June 22–24, landing right on top of the NBA Draft days. 14
Processus Consulting published the most detailed public breakdown of the model this week. The core mechanics: the eligibility clock starts at first full-time college enrollment or the academic year after a student-athlete's 19th birthday, whichever comes first. Traditional redshirt years and nearly all medical waivers are eliminated — an ACL tear in a player's freshman year means permanently losing that season. The only remaining exceptions are pregnancy, military service, and religious missions. Athletes currently enrolled can choose between the old and new systems; anyone entering college in 2026 or later is under the new rules. 14 JUCO players in particular face a harder path: two years at a junior college leaves only three seasons of NCAA eligibility under the new framework.
The Protect College Sports Act's Section 123 directly connects these two tracks. If the bill passes before the Sorsby case resolves, the court injunction that allowed him to play could be nullified by federal statute. That means the fate of the eligibility bill and the fate of the congressional bill are now linked in a way they weren't three weeks ago.

Around the programs

George Mason, a mid-major program in Fairfax, Virginia that competes in the Atlantic 10 Conference, announced on June 11 that head coach Tony Skinn received a two-year extension through the 2031-32 season — the first six-year contract in program history for any Mason head coach. 15 Skinn, a Mason alum from the program's 2006 Final Four run, is the fastest coach to 50 wins in school history and has led the Patriots to back-to-back NIT appearances. AD Marvin Lewis said the extension "reflects our confidence in Tony's vision, his leadership, and his commitment to continuing to position George Mason as a nationally respected program." 15
Kentucky has 14 scholarships filled but one slot still in play. Mark Pope spent last week chasing Nikola Kusturica, a 17-year-old, 6-foot-9 Serbian wing who plays for FC Barcelona, was named MVP of the 2024 FIBA U16 EuroBasket, and averaged 11.0 points and 5.8 rebounds in 34 international games during 2025-26. 16
Nikola Kusturica (#46, FC Barcelona) during the Adidas NextGen Finals — the 17-year-old Serbian wing Kentucky, Gonzaga, and UCLA are all pursuing
Kusturica playing for FC Barcelona in the Adidas NextGen Finals, where he scored 20 points and grabbed 10 rebounds in the title game 16
Gonzaga and UCLA are also in the running, and as A Sea of Blue's Chris Beasmore noted, they may have more playing time and NIL flexibility to offer given how deep Kentucky's roster already is. All 14 current Wildcats moved into Wildcat Coal Lodge on June 15 to begin summer workouts. 16 Pope is also waiting on a pending NCAA decision before filling his one remaining assistant coach vacancy; former NBA guard Jamal Crawford is a reported candidate but is coaching his son's AAU team through mid-July. 17
Women's basketball housekeeping: Jamelle Elliott stepped down from the UConn women's program on June 11 after 18 seasons as an assistant coach — more than 30 years with the program total as both player and coach, and a contributor to seven national championships. 18 Cal State Bakersfield remains the only D1 women's program with an unfilled head coaching position. Former HC Ari Wideman, who resigned April 14, landed at Xavier as an assistant on June 12, while Ray Alvarado continues as CSUB's interim. 19

Way-too-early rankings: Florida holds firm, St. John's surges

FOX Sports analyst Casey Jacobsen (the former Stanford guard who now covers college hoops for Fox) published a full updated men's Top 25 with Florida at #1, backed by a returning frontcourt — Haugh, Condon, Chinyelu — and guard Boogie Fland. Illinois sits at #2 after Andrej Stojakovic's withdrawal from the NBA Draft, Michigan at #3, Duke at #4. 20 That top-four core matches the CBS Sports Top 25 And 1, published June 9, though the order differs slightly (CBS: Florida, Duke, Michigan, Illinois). 21
The biggest mover in Jacobsen's list: St. John's, jumping from #11 to #8 after landing Baylor transfer Tounde Yessoufou (18.0 points, 6.0 rebounds per game at Baylor). Jacobsen wrote: "I already loved their roster last month, but the surprising addition of Baylor transfer Tounde Yessoufou is exactly what they needed." 20 Kentucky enters at #25 after Milan Momcilovic's commitment from Iowa State; Purdue is conspicuously absent. On the women's side, no major outlet published updated way-too-early rankings this week — the consensus top three of South Carolina, UConn, and USC holds as of the last published cycle.
Kansas is tracking at #19 (Sports Illustrated), #23 (ESPN), and just outside the CBS top 25, boosted by the addition of the nation's #1 2026 recruit Tyran Stokes. 22 Virginia sits between #13 and #16 depending on the outlet — The Athletic has the Cavaliers at #13, ESPN at #14, SI at #16 — after a 30-6 season that saw them return 59% of scoring. SI's Steve DeShazo put it plainly: "If last season proved anything, it's that the Cavaliers don't exactly mind being underdogs. Overlook them at your peril." 23

Dates to watch

  • June 18: Senate Commerce Committee markup of the Protect College Sports Act, 10:00 AM ET, Russell 253. Watch Section 123 (the Sorsby override provision) and the women's sports protection amendment most closely.
  • June 22–24: NCAA Division I Cabinet vote on the Five-for-Five eligibility framework. Same window as the NBA Draft.
  • June 23–24: NBA Draft, Barclays Center, Brooklyn. Peterson vs. Boozer at #2 is the last unresolved question at the top; Burries' Dallas landing, and whether Giannis trade talks produce draft-night fireworks, are the ones to watch down the board.
Cover photo: Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Sen. Maria Cantwell (D-WA) at the June 10 college sports roundtable on Capitol Hill — Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call.

Fuentes de referencia

  1. 1SB Nation: NBA mock draft 2026 — Updated projection after NBA Finals ends
  2. 2HoopsHype: Aggregate 2026 NBA Mock Draft 6.0
  3. 3Yahoo Sports: NBA Mock Draft 8.0
  4. 4The Athletic/NBA.com: Mock draft — Latest predictions for rounds 1 and 2
  5. 5Bleacher Report: New 2026 NBA Mock Draft with Blockbuster Jalen Williams Trade Idea
  6. 6CBS Sports: 2026 NBA Mock Draft — All 60 picks
  7. 7Sports Illustrated: 2026 NBA Mock Draft 2.0
  8. 8Roll Call: Senate panel sets markup on college sports bill
  9. 9Senate Commerce Committee: Chairman Cruz announces markup
  10. 10Roll Call: College sports bill sparks unusual alliances
  11. 11On3: Protect College Sports Act — Senate Commerce Committee announces markup
  12. 12Yahoo Sports/On3: Charlie Baker reveals key areas for amendments
  13. 13On3: NCAA argues Protect College Sports Act would override Brendan Sorsby case
  14. 14Processus Consulting: NCAA Eligibility Reform 2026 — The New Five-for-Five Rule
  15. 15George Mason Athletics: Tony Skinn earns contract extension through 2031-32
  16. 16A Sea of Blue: Kentucky pushing for Nikola Kusturica to fill final roster spot
  17. 17A Sea of Blue: Mark Pope discusses opening for final Kentucky assistant coach spot
  18. 18WHoopDirt: Women's coaching changes
  19. 19Xavier Athletics: Ari Wideman named women's basketball assistant coach
  20. 20FOX Sports: College basketball rankings — St. John's storms into top 10, Kentucky enters top 25
  21. 21247Sports: College basketball preseason rankings — Are Florida, Duke, Michigan, Illinois overhyped?
  22. 22Topeka Capital-Journal: How Kansas basketball is projected in way-too-early polls
  23. 23Sports Illustrated: Is Virginia basketball underrated in way-too-early rankings?

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