Bulls Draft Gamble Suddenly Puts Pressure On One Summer League Hope

The Chicago Bulls' bold draft strategy aims to rejuvenate their roster as Summer League offers a first glimpse of their latest young prospects.

The Bulls took a big swing on draft night, and the first real chance to see whether it was worth it arrives with Summer League.

Chicago’s 2026 NBA Draft haul starts with real upside. Moving up through the Draft Lottery gave the organization the No. 4 pick, and that turned into power forward Caleb Wilson.

The Bulls then added Dailyn Swain at No. 15, giving the front office two young pieces with plenty of room to grow. If both players make meaningful progress in their rookie seasons, Chicago can start building some real optimism around the future.

But the more questionable part of the night came later. The Bulls sent the 38th overall pick to the Indiana Pacers for guard Kam Jones, who was waived just days later.

They also moved the 56th overall pick to the Los Angeles Lakers for cash considerations. For a team that needs young talent, those decisions stood out.

Bryson Graham clearly valued flexibility and roster spots over adding more rookies, and Chicago used its two-way slots on a pair of undrafted players instead: Tobe Awaka and Jaylin Sellers. Awaka is the safer bet to understand right away.

He was one of the best rebounders in this draft class, and that part of his game should translate. Even so, his lack of true size for the center spot and his thin offensive skill set as a power forward make it hard to expect much more than what already shows up on paper - rebounding and defense.

Sellers is the more interesting test case.

At Providence last season, he averaged 18.3 points, 4.2 rebounds, and 1.6 assists while hitting 42.9% from 3-point range over 33 games. He also won the Big East scoring title as a senior. That combination - perimeter shooting and a sturdy defensive frame - is exactly the kind of profile teams chase in a developmental wing.

Still, there’s a reason he remains a gamble. Sellers will have to keep the jumper humming if he wants to carve out a role in his first NBA season.

The spacing is better in the league, but he’ll also have to learn how to attack closeouts against stronger defenders and move without the ball when he’s no longer the center of the offense. His playmaking and feel for the floor are also still questions, and Summer League offers a chance to answer them.

With Swain and free-agent addition Norman Powell expected to handle most of the minutes at shooting guard, Sellers doesn’t need to become an immediate contributor to make Chicago’s bet look smart. That would be too much to ask from an undrafted player. What the Bulls do need is proof that his shooting can carry over.

If Sellers strings together a strong Summer League, he can do more than boost his own stock. He can also start easing the concern around the Bulls’ draft-night trades.

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