Dybantsa unanimous, Giannis on the clock, and Congress makes history
22/6/2026 · 9:34

Dybantsa unanimous, Giannis on the clock, and Congress makes history

With the NBA Draft opening Tuesday at 8 p.m. ET, this final pre-draft roundup (June 15–22) covers all four converging storylines: AJ Dybantsa holds unanimous #1 status across all 10 credible mock drafts, with the Clippers' #5 slot the most contested in the lottery; the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade reached a "red zone" deadline with the Heat and Celtics as finalists and Shams Charania predicting resolution before draft night; the Protect College Sports Act cleared the Senate Commerce Committee 19-9 — the first college sports bill ever to pass a Senate committee, with Section 123 apparently surviving intact; and the NCAA's Five-for-Five eligibility vote is pending at the June 23-24 DI Council meeting. Offseason tracker covers Kusturica's four-program recruiting battle and CBS's updated Top 25 And 1 V18.

NCAA basketball weekly roundup — June 15–22, 2026.
Tomorrow night at Barclays Center in Brooklyn, the NBA Draft opens — and for the first time in recent memory, it arrives with a franchise-altering trade still unresolved, a college sports bill that just cleared Congress for the first time ever, and an NCAA eligibility vote scheduled for the same 48-hour window. Everything is happening at once.

NBA draft preview: consensus holds, chaos edition aside

Ten credible mock drafts. Ten times AJ Dybantsa (BYU) to the Washington Wizards at #1. NBA.com's Ben Couch, who aggregated all ten in the final consensus published the day before the draft, put it plainly: "By any measure, a clear top tier has emerged, with AJ Dybantsa, Darryn Peterson, Cameron Boozer and Caleb Wilson enticing the mocks with superstar potential." 1
The top four is locked in position across eight of ten mocks. Darryn Peterson (Kansas) at #2 to Utah, Cameron Boozer (Duke) at #3 to Memphis, Caleb Wilson (North Carolina) at #4 to Chicago. Nine players appear in the lottery — picks 1 through 14 — across all ten mocks, an unusually tight consensus for this stage. 1
PickPlayerPos.SchoolProjected team (consensus)
1AJ DybantsaSFBYUWashington Wizards
2Darryn PetersonPGKansasUtah Jazz
3Cameron BoozerPFDukeMemphis Grizzlies
4Caleb WilsonSFNorth CarolinaChicago Bulls
5Keaton WaglerPGIllinoisLA Clippers
6Darius Acuff Jr.PGArkansasBrooklyn Nets
7Mikel Brown Jr.PGSouth CarolinaNew Orleans Pelicans
8Isaiah FlemingsSGMichigan StateAtlanta Hawks
9Brayden BurriesSGArizonaDallas Mavericks
10Aday MaraCMichiganMilwaukee Bucks
Picks 11-14 (Lendeborg to OKC at #12, Johnson Jr. to Charlotte at #14) complete the Michigan trio in 8 of 10 mocks. 1
The only notable dissent came from The Athletic's Zach Harper, who published a self-described "chaos edition" on June 21 that flipped Boozer to #1 and dropped Dybantsa to #3. Harper was upfront about the premise: "I'm not going to come out here and give you a regular mock draft," he wrote, adding, "Remember, this is a chaos mock draft." The inspiration was a local D.C. radio host who asked about Dybantsa versus Boozer at #1 — a debate Harper hadn't seriously entertained until that moment. 2 Yahoo Sports' Bullets Forever survey of all official mocks confirmed the chaos draft is the outlier: "Since May, nothing changed — Dybantsa is still the unanimous winner in all official mock drafts." 3
CBS Sports' Adam Finkelstein added a detail that keeps this from being fully settled: Dybantsa reportedly "still hasn't been told he will be the No. 1 pick," which Finkelstein said "reaffirms what we said back at the combine — that while he may be the favorite, this isn't the foregone conclusion some are suggesting." 4
Pick #5 is the most divided slot in the lottery. Keaton Wagler (Illinois) leads 8 of 10 mocks for the Clippers, but the team is described across multiple sources as "weighing all four point guards and multiple trade scenarios." 4 Kevin O'Connor (Yahoo Sports) put Darius Acuff Jr. there in Mock Draft 9.0, citing league sources who said "the Clippers or Nets could select him to force the Kings — or another team — to move up." 5 Finkelstein's case for Wagler: "It's his feel for the game and natural instincts that may be his true superpower." 4
Michigan is projecting three first-round picks. Center Aday Mara (7-foot-3, Spain) is the consensus #10 pick to Milwaukee; forward Yaxel Lendeborg is most commonly projected at #11 or #12; Morez Johnson Jr. is locked in at #14 for the Charlotte Hornets in eight of ten mocks. O'Connor, who championed Johnson Jr. earlier this cycle, wrote: "You know the guy on a championship team who never gets enough credit nationally? That's Morez Johnson." 5 His case is simple: versatile enough to defend multiple positions, fits any system, no ego — the "connective tissue" player OKC built its dynasty with. 5
SB Nation's Ricky O'Donnell, who briefly flipped to Peterson at #1 last week, flipped back to Dybantsa on June 21. His explanation: if the Wizards really wanted Peterson, they'd have tried to trade up from Utah — and no such talks have surfaced. He still personally prefers Boozer: "I'd take Cam Boozer with the first pick, and I lean Peterson over Dybantsa on my personal board, but it still feels like A.J. is the slight front-runner to go No. 1." 6
Cameron Boozer (#12, Duke) shoots over Tarris Reed Jr. during the NCAA Tournament with March Madness signage in the background
Boozer put up 22.5 PPG and 10.2 RPG at Duke — O'Donnell's personal #1, but the unanimous consensus slots him #3 2

Giannis trade: Heat vs. Celtics, draft-night deadline

The Giannis Antetokounmpo (Milwaukee Bucks, 10-time All-Star) saga has consumed the league for 13 months. As of Monday afternoon, a trade still has not been completed — but every signal points toward one happening Tuesday night.
Evan Sidery reported on June 21 that negotiations are "in the red zone," with the Bucks and Heat "putting the finishing touches on a blockbuster featuring multiple facilitating teams." 7 The next morning, ESPN's Shams Charania said on Get Up that the Bucks will "reach a resolution" before the draft and that it now appears to be a two-team deal rather than a multi-team construction. 8
Two teams remain in the bidding. The Miami Heat are the frontrunner, with a package centered on Tyler Herro, Kel'el Ware, Jaime Jaquez Jr., and multiple first-round picks including pick #13. The Boston Celtics are the other finalist. ESPN's Brian Windhorst reported June 22 that Jaylen Brown is now on the table: "Brown is on the table, and he could get traded for Giannis in the short-term future." 8
The Heat have their own clock pressure. Sun Sentinel columnist Ira Winderman pointed out that Miami's #13 pick is "among the Heat's best trade assets, and an asset that effectively expires once a player is selected by the Heat at that slot." 9 Once they use it themselves, that leverage vanishes.
The Milwaukee asking price has been a sticking point throughout. CBS Sports reported June 20 that multiple league sources have described Bucks GM Jon Horst's demands as "unrealistic" — asking for returns that would leave whichever team acquires Giannis "too barren to contend for a championship." 10 Giannis is 31, carries one year of guaranteed contract, and has played just three playoff games since 2022.
Bucks co-owner Jimmy Haslam set the draft as a "natural time" for resolution back in May: "If Giannis does play somewhere else, then we ought to get a lot of assets… If he's here, then you build the team differently." 11 Marc Stein confirmed Sunday that no deal was reached over Father's Day weekend, but that "the belief persists throughout the NBA that the Milwaukee Bucks won't be able to drag out a saga… for more than another day or two." 11
One reported three-team framework (sourced to Detroit sports radio, flagged by BasketNews as unverified) would send Giannis and Duncan Robinson to Miami, a package of Isaiah Stewart, Ron Holland, Jaquez, Nikola Jovic, and Kel'el Ware to Milwaukee, and Tyler Herro to Detroit. 12 Charania's Sunday morning reporting suggests the final deal may not involve a third team at all.
The draft begins Tuesday at 8 p.m. ET. The Bucks hold multiple first-round picks — #10 (Aday Mara is a projected fit), #28, and potentially more through any trade — which gives Milwaukee significant draft-night flexibility regardless of which direction the Giannis talks go.

Protect College Sports Act: first bill to clear a Senate committee

On June 18, the Protect College Sports Act (S.4668) passed the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee 19-9 — the first college sports reform bill in U.S. history to clear a Senate committee vote. Twelve Republicans and seven Democrats voted in favor; seven Democrats and two Republicans (Roger Wicker of Mississippi and Todd Young of Indiana) voted against. 13
Committee chair Ted Cruz (R-TX) and co-sponsor Maria Cantwell (D-WA) framed the vote as a signal to the Big Ten and SEC, which had spent weeks lobbying against the bill. Cruz's assessment: "No one got everything they wanted. But we did create a framework that stabilizes college athletics." 14 Cantwell's was sharper: "What we did today is say we're not going to let the most powerful, richest conferences dictate to the rest of America what's going to happen to 500,000 athletes." 13
What the bill does (as amended through markup):
  • Establishes a five-year eligibility window for student-athletes, sets federal transfer rules and agent regulations
  • Requires all Division I schools with annual sports revenue above $80 million to maintain women's and Olympic sports scholarships at 2024-25 levels — an expansion from the original draft, which only covered schools that opted into media rights pooling 13
  • Lowers the "anti-super league" revenue threshold from $1 billion to $700 million, now covering all four Power conferences (the ACC at approximately $826.5 million and Big 12 at approximately $610.9 million fall under it) 15
  • Adds a "Lane Kiffin rule" restricting mid-season coaching departures 13
  • Includes a Schmitt amendment offering SEC and Big Ten more governance rights in any new FBS joint rights entity, designed to incentivize their participation 15
Section 123 and the Sorsby connection. The bill's most contested provision — Section 123, which applies the law retroactively to any pending litigation — appears to have survived markup intact. The NCAA sent DI commissioners a letter on June 12 confirming: "Yes, the bill would resolve the issue raised in the Sorsby case." The NCAA explained that if the law passes while the case is still unresolved, it "would override Sorsby's legal challenge and allow the NCAA to maintain its eligibility restriction." 16 Post-markup reporting from CBS Sports, The Hill, Yahoo Sports, and Sports Business Journal made no mention of Section 123 being amended or removed.
For context: Brendan Sorsby is the Texas Tech quarterback who admitted to placing more than 9,000 sports bets during his college career — including at least 40 on his own team's games while enrolled at Indiana — and won a court injunction from a Lubbock county judge to play despite the NCAA's eligibility ban. On June 15, Texas Tech board chair Cody Campbell announced Sorsby would not play for the school in 2026 and would instead enter the NFL supplemental draft, citing the June 22 deadline. "Brendan and Texas Tech stand on very solid and legitimate legal ground, but he faces a June 22nd deadline to be eligible to enter the NFL's supplemental draft, and there is no practical way to resolve all the various pending legal disputes… prior to this date." 17
The opposition and the road ahead. The SEC and Big Ten issued a joint statement Thursday morning calling the bill's key provisions still unacceptable, even after what Cantwell called a "significant concession" in lowering the super league threshold. 13 NCAA president Charlie Baker endorsed the markup result, calling it "a powerful statement to the growing bipartisan support for targeted intervention from Congress." 13
Senate Majority Leader John Thune, who voted for the bill, reportedly intends to bring it to the Senate floor in July. Cruz said: "I believe this bill is going to pass." 15 The Senate needs 60 votes; recess begins August 10, leaving roughly 50 days on the legislative calendar. The House picture is darker: House Majority Leader Steve Scalise is leading opposition, and Politico reported that House Republican leadership has declared the bill "dead on arrival" in the lower chamber. 18

NCAA 5-in-5 vote: pending — here's what it means

The NCAA Division I Council meets June 23-24 — the same days as the NBA Draft — and a vote on the "Five-for-Five" eligibility reform is expected. The vote has not yet occurred.
What's being decided: the DI Board of Directors directed the Cabinet in April to formalize a model giving student-athletes five seasons of competition within a five-year consecutive window, starting from high school graduation or age 19, whichever comes first. 19 Under the new rules, traditional redshirt years and nearly all medical hardship waivers go away. An ACL tear in a player's freshman year means losing that season permanently. The only remaining exceptions are pregnancy, military service, and official religious missions.
For transfer portal strategy, the effect is significant. Junior college players who spend two years at an NJCAA program would have just three NCAA seasons remaining under the new framework instead of five. 19 Current athletes can elect the old or new rules, whichever benefits them more; incoming 2026 and 2027 high school graduates are on the new system.
The PCSA and 5-in-5 are now closely linked: if the bill becomes law, it would establish a nearly identical federal eligibility window — potentially making the NCAA vote on Tuesday either redundant or a preview of what federal statute codifies.

Offseason tracker

Kusturica's four-way battle intensifies

The week's most dramatic recruiting story played out in 24 hours. On June 16, 247Sports analyst Travis Branham logged a Crystal Ball prediction for 17-year-old Serbian wing Nikola Kusturica to Kentucky (confidence level: 7). By June 17, Branham had pulled it. 20 21
Kusturica is a 6-foot-8 wing who plays for FC Barcelona's youth system, won MVP honors at the 2025 FIBA U16 EuroBasket (20.0 PPG, 7.7 RPG, 3.4 APG, 2.1 SPG), and is projected as a top-5 pick in the 2028 NBA Draft. He faces two sequential decisions: whether to enroll for the 2026-27 season or stay with Barcelona another year, and if he enrolls, which program to attend. Branham currently believes he will "likely play college basketball this year." 20
Nikola Kusturica (#46, FC Barcelona Atlètic) dribbles during a Liga U match against Real Madrid, January 2026 in Madrid
Kusturica's size, passing, and perimeter defense made him the clear MVP at U16 EuroBasket in 2025 20
The four programs competing: Kentucky, Michigan, Gonzaga, and UCLA. Michigan enters with one remaining scholarship on a national championship roster (37-3 last season); per Maize n Brew, he is a "perfect fit for Dusty May's system" — a do-it-all 6-foot-8 wing who can guard 1-4. 22 Gonzaga has been recruiting him longer and has a larger positional need at the wing. Per The Spokesman-Review, Gonzaga was considered the early leader before this week. 23
Kentucky's recruitment pause came amid another development: new athletic director J Batt met the basketball team on June 18 and told the players "I'm going to be your biggest fan." 20 The school also has an open assistant coaching slot; former NBA guard Jamal Crawford, a long-time broadcast analyst for NBC, is Kentucky's reported target — his NBC duties ended when the Western Conference Finals concluded. 24

Way-too-early 2026-27 rankings: Ohio State enters, Big Ten dominates

CBS Sports published Top 25 And 1 Version 18 on June 16, the week's only significant men's rankings update. Ohio State jumped from unranked to #24 after signing five-star guard LJ Smith — originally a 2027 recruit ranked #28 nationally who reclassified to 2026. Head coach Jake Diebler: "He's a mature player who fits our program and will handle this transition well. He has the ability to score from multiple levels on the floor and will be a great addition to our backcourt." 25
The CBS top 10: 1. Florida, 2. Duke, 3. Michigan, 4. Illinois, 5. UConn, 6. Michigan State, 7. Texas, 8. Arizona, 9. Gonzaga, 10. Virginia. 25
CBS Sports Top 25 And 1 Version 18 preseason rankings graphic for 2026-27 college basketball
CBS Sports Top 25 And 1 V18 — Florida holds #1, seven Big Ten programs in the top 26 25
Seven Big Ten programs appear in the full 26 (Michigan, Illinois, Michigan State, USC, Purdue, Indiana, Ohio State). Kansas slipped to the first team out after its modest offseason relative to peers. Florida's hold on #1 is based on returning six of its top seven scorers from a 27-8 SEC championship team. 25
On3 released its Way-Too-Early 9.0 the same day, with a slightly different order (Florida #1, Michigan #2, UConn #3, Duke #4, Michigan State #5) and Duke at #4 generating pushback from Duke media. 26 No women's basketball way-too-early rankings were published during this window; the prior consensus of South Carolina, UConn, and USC at the top remains unchanged.

Coaching and other notes

CSUB women's basketball remains the only unfilled Division I women's head coaching position heading into fall 2026. Ray Alvarado has served as interim since April 14, when Ari Wideman resigned to take an assistant job at Xavier. No finalists have been publicly reported. 27
DeAndre Haynes was added to Danny Sprinkle's staff at Washington as an assistant coach. Green Bay extended head coach Doug Gottlieb through the 2030-31 season. 28

Dates to watch

  • June 23 (Tuesday), 8 p.m. ET: NBA Draft, Barclays Center, Brooklyn. Dybantsa's actual selection by Washington opens the night; Giannis trade resolution — if it happens — could arrive before, during, or after the first round. The Heat's #13 pick is the most leveraged asset in play.
  • June 23-24: NCAA Division I Council meeting. Five-for-Five eligibility vote expected; result will determine whether the redshirt era officially ends for incoming freshmen.
  • July (expected): Senate floor vote on the Protect College Sports Act. Majority Leader Thune needs 60 votes; the committee's 19-9 margin with seven Big Ten/SEC-footprint senators voting no signals the floor fight will be close.
Cover photo: Giannis Antetokounmpo (#29) during pre-game warmups at Delta Center, March 2026. Photo: Chris Gardner / Getty Images via SB Nation.

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