
2026. 6. 29. · 09:44
Draft chalk, 5-in-5 passes, PCSA waits
This week’s roundup covers the post-NBA-Draft NCAA-connected fallout: AJ Dybantsa at No. 1, Darryn Peterson over Cameron Boozer, Michigan’s three first-rounders, and Milwaukee’s post-Giannis rebuild around Brayden Burries and Nate Ament. It also explains the NCAA 5-in-5 vote outcome, PCSA’s next Senate step, and offseason tracker updates on Kusturica, CSUB women’s basketball, Michigan’s coaching transition, and post-draft way-too-early rankings.
NCAA basketball weekly roundup, June 22-29, 2026.
The NBA Draft answered the question that framed the last month of college basketball: the top of the board was chalk, but the consequences were not. AJ Dybantsa went first, Darryn Peterson stayed ahead of Cameron Boozer, Michigan put three national-title pieces in the top 12, and the Bucks turned the Giannis Antetokounmpo trade into a two-prospect rebuild built around Brayden Burries and Nate Ament. 1 2 3
Off the floor, the NCAA Division I Cabinet approved the age-based 5-in-5 eligibility model on June 23, while the Protect College Sports Act moved to the Senate Calendar on June 24 with a July floor vote now the next major checkpoint. 4 5
Draft night became a college-player referendum
The first five picks matched the final consensus order: Dybantsa to Washington, Peterson to Utah, Boozer to Memphis, Caleb Wilson to Chicago, and Keaton Wagler to the LA Clippers. 1 NBA.com also reported that the first 20 picks were college players, the first such first-round start since 1994. 2
| Pick | Player | College | Why it mattered |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | AJ Dybantsa | BYU | Washington made Dybantsa the No. 1 pick, completing the consensus outcome that had dominated the pre-draft cycle. 1 |
| 2 | Darryn Peterson | Kansas | Utah took Peterson ahead of Boozer; NBA.com's final consensus mock had 8 of 10 outlets already placing Peterson second. 6 |
| 3 | Cameron Boozer | Duke | Memphis landed Boozer at No. 3, and CBS Sports gave the pick its lone A+ among the top lottery grades. 7 |
| 4 | Caleb Wilson | North Carolina | Chicago selected Wilson fourth, keeping the top-four consensus intact. 1 |
| 5 | Keaton Wagler | Illinois | The Clippers took Wagler fifth, completing the consensus top five and capping his rise from a lightly ranked high school prospect to a top-five pick. 1 8 |
Dybantsa framed the top pick as a long-held target rather than a surprise. He said being No. 1 meant a lot because he had been No. 1 throughout high school and wanted to be mentioned with LeBron James, Cooper Flagg, and Allen Iverson. 8 Peterson struck a different tone after Utah took him second: "The celebration stops tonight. I got drafted today, but tomorrow, I'm an NBA player." 9
Michigan had the loudest program-level night. Morez Johnson Jr. went No. 9 to Dallas, Yaxel Lendeborg went No. 11 to Golden State, and Aday Mara went No. 12 to Oklahoma City. 1 NBA.com described the trio as the first group of three non-freshmen from one school to go in the lottery since Florida's Al Horford, Joakim Noah, and Corey Brewer in 2007. 2
Johnson's pick was the one that split the room. CBS Sports graded Dallas at C+ because Johnson ranked only 17th on its final prospect board, while The Ringer called the pick "perhaps the draft's biggest shocker." 7 10 The fit has one obvious explanation: Dallas hired Dusty May on draft day, then used No. 9 on a forward May coached at Michigan. 11
The draft's broader shape should matter to college fans more than any single grade. NBA.com reported nine freshmen in the top 10, tied with 2017 and 2025 for the most in that range, and all 20 first picks came from college programs. 2 That is a useful counterweight to the NIL-era fear that the sport is losing its draft relevance.
Giannis fallout that matters for college hoops
The Giannis trade became a college basketball story the moment Milwaukee turned Miami's package into two lottery swings. The Bucks traded Giannis Antetokounmpo and Bobby Portis to Miami for Tyler Herro, Kel'el Ware, Jaime Jaquez Jr., Kasparas Jakučionis, the No. 13 pick, unprotected first-round picks in 2031 and 2033, a 2030 first-round swap, and a 2033 second-round pick. 12
Milwaukee used its own No. 10 pick on Burries, the Arizona guard who averaged 16.1 points, 4.9 rebounds, and 2.4 assists while shooting 39.1% from three. 3 The Bucks used the No. 13 pick from Miami on Ament, the Tennessee forward listed at 6-foot-10 and 211 pounds after averaging 16.7 points, 6.3 rebounds, and 2.3 assists. 3
Those two picks are Milwaukee's first top-15 selections since Thon Maker went No. 10 in 2016, and the franchise currently lacks first-round picks in 2027 and 2029. 3 That context explains why The Ringer treated the Bucks as a draft loser, while CBS Sports saw a cleaner player-development angle after Burries slid to No. 10 and Ament became available at No. 13. 10 8
The early tone in Milwaukee is development-heavy. Head coach Taylor Jenkins showed both rookies their five worst college plays in predraft meetings, and Ament said he wanted to be around "basketball junkies" who want to stay in the gym. 3 For NCAA watchers, that makes the Bucks a live case study in how quickly one-and-done prospects can become the face of a rebuild.
Governance moved from pending to implementation
The 5-in-5 vote is no longer a watch item. The NCAA Division I Cabinet unanimously approved the age-based model on June 23, giving Division I athletes five seasons to use within five years, with the clock starting at high school graduation or the athlete's 19th birthday, whichever comes first. 4
| Issue | This week's update | What changes next |
|---|---|---|
| NCAA 5-in-5 | The Division I Cabinet approved the age-based model on June 23. 4 | Traditional redshirts, medical waivers, and general extension waivers are eliminated, with exceptions limited to military service, religious missions, and maternity leave. 4 |
| Current athletes | Currently enrolled athletes with remaining eligibility may choose the old or new rules, whichever benefits them more. 4 | Athletes using the old-rule path face a July 31, 2026 waiver deadline. 4 |
| Brendan Sorsby | The NFL said on June 23 that it would not hold a 2026 supplemental draft, denying Sorsby's application. 13 | The NFL encouraged Sorsby to prepare for the 2027 NFL Draft, while his NCAA eligibility remains permanently revoked for gambling violations. 13 |
| PCSA | The Protect College Sports Act was placed on the Senate Calendar on June 24 after passing committee 19-9 on June 18. 5 | Sen. Ted Cruz said Majority Leader John Thune intends to bring the bill to the floor in July, before the August recess. 14 |
The governance takeaway is straightforward: the NCAA now has its own age-based rule, but Congress is still deciding whether to federalize a broader college-sports framework. PCSA needs 60 Senate votes in a chamber with 53 Republicans, and the bill still faces Big Ten and SEC resistance despite amendments to Olympic-sport protections, anti-super-league thresholds, and anti-expansion language. 5
The politics are not abstract for basketball roster planning. Sen. Maria Cantwell accused conference commissioners of putting their own realignment interests ahead of the broader athlete population, saying, "People have to wake up." 14 Sen. Todd Young, one of two Republicans on the committee to vote no, said through a spokesman that he hoped additional changes could address Big Ten concerns. 15
Offseason tracker
Post-draft men's way-too-early (WTE) rankings now have two fresh reference points. Jon Rothstein's June 25 ROTHSTEIN 45 put Florida No. 1, Duke No. 2, Illinois No. 3, Michigan No. 4, and UConn No. 5. 16 Anthony Kristensen's June 28 WholeHogSports ballot kept Florida, Duke, Illinois, and Michigan in the same top four, but placed Michigan State fifth and Tennessee sixth. 17
| Topic | Status | Reader takeaway |
|---|---|---|
| Men's WTE rankings | Rothstein has Florida, Duke, Illinois, Michigan, and UConn as his top five; Kristensen has Florida, Duke, Illinois, Michigan, and Michigan State as his top five. 16 17 | The early consensus cluster is Florida, Duke, Illinois, and Michigan, with UConn, Michigan State, Tennessee, Arizona, and St. John's moving by outlet. 16 17 |
| Nikola Kusturica | Ben Roberts said on June 28 that he is not sold on Kentucky's late momentum, and Travis Branham's June 17 Crystal Ball prediction remains withdrawn. 18 | Kentucky, UCLA, Michigan, and Gonzaga remain in the race, with a decision expected after the FIBA U17 World Cup ends July 5. 18 |
| CSUB women's basketball | WBB Blog lists 63 Division I women's head-coaching changes filled and one job still open, Cal State Bakersfield. 19 | Ray Alvarado remains the interim head coach more than two months after Ari Wideman's April 14 resignation. 19 |
| Michigan coaching transition | Dallas announced Dusty May as head coach on June 23, and Michigan named Mike Boynton Jr. interim head coach after May's departure. 11 20 | Boynton said he is "operating as if I'm going to be the coach," while Michigan players cannot enter the transfer portal until July 24. 20 |
The next week has two clean checkpoints. Kusturica's FIBA U17 window runs through July 5, and PCSA's July floor-vote push will test whether the committee coalition can survive full-Senate politics. 18 14
Cover image: 2026 NBA Draft first-round class, via NBA.com.
참고 출처
- 1NBA.com: 2026 NBA Draft Results
- 2NBA.com: College players rule 1st round
- 3NBA.com: Bucks look to rookies Brayden Burries, Nate Ament
- 4CBS Sports: NCAA approves age-based five-year eligibility rule
- 5CBS Sports: Protect College Sports Act passes Senate committee
- 6NBA.com: 2026 Consensus Mock Draft
- 7CBS Sports: 2026 NBA Draft grades
- 8CBS Sports: 2026 NBA Draft winners and losers
- 9NBA.com: Jazz draft Darryn Peterson No. 2 overall
- 10The Ringer: 2026 NBA Draft winners and losers
- 11Baltimore Sun/AP: Mavs hire Dusty May just in time for NBA draft
- 12NBA.com: Heat acquire Giannis Antetokounmpo in blockbuster deal
- 13Yahoo Sports: NFL will not host supplemental draft for Brendan Sorsby
- 14Yahoo Sports/AOL: Big Ten, SEC commissioners ripped by key senator
- 15Indianapolis Star/AOL: Why Todd Young voted against college sports bill
- 16FanDuel Research: ROTHSTEIN 45 2026-27 preseason rankings
- 17WholeHogSports: 2026-27 way-too-early men's basketball top 25
- 18WildcatCorner: Kentucky writer skeptical on Kusturica
- 19WBB Blog: Women's Basketball Coaching Changes Tracker, 2026
- 20The Athletic: Mike Boynton pushes to replace Dusty May

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