BYU Draft Momentum Just Showed Up In Another Big 12 Projection

With a historic number of draft picks and future stars on the horizon, the Big 12 is set to elevate its basketball dominance by 2026-27.

The Big 12’s 2026 NBA Draft haul was already the kind of thing that turns heads: 13 players selected, the most in conference history and the most since 2010. It was also the first time the league owned the first two picks, with AJ Dybantsa and Darryn Peterson going at the top. In other words, the conference didn’t just have a good night - it owned the night.

Now comes the obvious next question: can the Big 12 back it up in 2027?

According to The Athletic’s Sam Vecenie, the answer is yes. In a recent way-too-early mock draft, Vecenie projected seven Big 12 players in the first round alone, a sign that the league’s talent pipeline is still rolling.

His list starts at the very top with Tyran Stokes of Kansas at No. 1.

Arizona shows up in a big way after that, with Caleb Holt at No. 4, Motiejus Krivas at No. 9 and Ivan Kharchenkov at No.

  1. Bruce Branch of BYU is slotted at No.

16, Baylor’s Dylan Mingo comes in at No. 28 and West Virginia’s Miles Sadler rounds things out at No. 30.

That top-end presence matters. Stokes gives the Big 12 the projected No. 1 pick again, while Arizona landing three first-rounders would be a massive statement. Not many teams can even dream of putting that many NBA-level prospects on one roster.

There’s plenty to like beyond Tucson, too. Baylor and BYU each having a player in the first 30 would extend what could become back-to-back years of first-round success. And Sadler’s inclusion is a notable one for West Virginia, since the Mountaineers haven’t had a first-round pick in nearly 20 years.

Seven first-rounders wouldn’t quite match this year’s total of nine, but it would still be a strong showing - and that’s before even getting to the second round. Vecenie’s mock is only a snapshot, not the final word, which means the Big 12 could end up sending even more players to the league.

Will the conference reach 13 draft picks again? Nobody knows.

But the bigger point is hard to miss: the Big 12 keeps producing NBA talent, and scouts are paying attention. The league’s future looks loaded, and that’s exactly why it keeps getting mentioned among the best conferences in the country.

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