Early 2027 NBA Draft Board Sends Two Duke Players Very Different Messages

Spotlight on rising stars: With an eye on the 2027 NBA Draft, these college basketball standouts are positioned to capture attention and elevate their game to first-round prominence.

The 2027 NBA Draft picture is already starting to take shape, and while the headline will belong to the incoming freshman class, there’s a different group worth watching closely: the returning college players who can rocket up boards over the next year.

That list is loaded with size, skill and opportunity. Some of these players already flashed first-round talent.

Others are about to get much bigger roles and a chance to turn production into real draft buzz. Here are the 10 returning college basketball players most likely to become 2027 NBA Draft first-round picks.

Braylon Mullins may be the cleanest breakout bet on the board. The 6’6 guard averaged 12 points and 3.5 rebounds for UConn last season and showed he can pile up points in a hurry, with three games of 25 points and at least 8 points in all six NCAA Tournament outings. With Alex Karaban and Tarrie Reed gone and starting guard Solomon Ball expected to miss next year because of a wrist injury, Mullins is positioned to become the center of the Huskies’ offense.

Amari Allen is right there too. The Alabama freshman put up 11.4 points, 6.9 rebounds and 3.1 assists, and the 6’8 guard/wing already looks like a real playmaker.

He hit 34% from deep on 4.3 attempts per game, and if that number creeps up even a little, his lottery case gets a lot stronger. With Labaron Philon headed to the NBA, Allen should have the ball in his hands more often.

Motiejus Krivas fits the current NBA appetite for bigs. The 7’2 Arizona center averaged 10.4 points and 8.2 rebounds while shooting 57% from the field and earned All-Big 12 honors. With Tobe Awaka and Koa Peat gone, his role is about to grow, and if the rim-running piece comes along, he can get into the lottery conversation.

Thomas Haugh is already producing like a high-level prospect. The Florida forward nearly doubled his scoring this past season, shot 46% from the field and 33% from three on more than five attempts a night, and had 13 games with at least 20 points. The 6’9 forward was an All-American, and while his role may not expand much, the next step is simple: keep scoring efficiently and keep doing everything else scouts like.

Dame Sarr gave Duke what it expected on defense. The 6’8 wing earned All-ACC honors on that end and looked the part of a legit stopper.

Offensively, though, the numbers were rough: 40% from the field and 32% from deep on 133 attempts, with only eight double-digit scoring games. He has the frame and defensive value to sell as a “3 and D” prospect, but the shot has to become more reliable.

Tounde Yessoufou brings a different kind of upside. The 6’5 guard/wing scored 17.8 points per game as a freshman at Baylor and showed he can get buckets, but the outside shot was a problem at 29% on 181 attempts from deep.

Now at St. John’s, he has a fresh opportunity to sharpen that part of his game and make real strides on defense too.

Among returning players, his stock could rise as much as anyone’s.

Malachi Moreno is another big man with a clear runway. The 7’0 Kentucky center started 30 games, averaged 7.8 points and 6.3 rebounds, and shot 58% from the field.

He nearly entered the draft after his first season, and with Brandon Garrison gone, he should see a bigger workload. The size, athleticism and production profile can turn him into a top-20 type prospect if the numbers climb.

Patrick Ngongba doesn’t get enough attention yet, but Duke has a lot to work with. The former five-star averaged 10.1 points and 5.8 rebounds, and his calling card is a mix of defense and rim running. With Maliq Brown and Cameron Boozer gone, the junior big man should get his biggest chance yet to show the passing and skill that have been easy to overlook.

Alijah Arenas played through an offseason knee injury and still flashed serious scoring ability for USC, including three straight games with 24 or more points in league play. The problem was efficiency, as he shot just 34% from the field, which kept him from being a real first-round name. A better supporting cast, with Rodney Rice also back from injury, should help Arenas’ efficiency take a major step forward.

Davis Fogle closes the list after earning extended run when Braden Huff went down with a season-ending injury. The 6’7 Gonzaga guard had eight games with at least 15 points and looks like a natural breakout candidate. He shot 35% from three, and if that number improves, he could turn himself into the kind of scoring wing NBA teams covet.

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Grayson Allen Is Heading Back To North Carolina Again

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Allens addition comes as part of a larger deal that also shifted multiple draft assets and another veteran into the mix, the kind of transaction that signals the Hornets are trying to balance present help with longer-term flexibility. It also adds another familiar face for a franchise that has spent plenty of time looking for steadier perimeter production, and it gives Allen another chance to establish himself in a region where he has always drawn attention for reasons beyond the box score. [Read more 🡒]

Jon Scheyer Just Turned Up The Heat On Dukes 2027 Guard Hunt

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Diggs brings the sort of versatility that keeps major programs circling, and Duke is not alone in that pursuit. Kansas, Kentucky and North Carolina are already part of the mix, which only adds pressure to an already competitive recruitment and makes Scheyers latest move more than just an early courtesy. The Blue Devils have built strong classes on the back of aggressive identification of elite guards, and this one now feels like it is only getting started. [Read more 🡒]

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CBS Sports first 2027 mock draft has three Duke players in the lottery, with Patrick Ngongba II, Dame Sarr and Cameron Williams all landing in premium draft territory. For Scheyer, that kind of early buzz is flattering, but it also raises the bar again, because keeping a roster stocked with that level of pro talent is the part that is easy to admire from afar and much harder to sustain year after year. [Read more 🡒]