Darryn Peterson’s first NBA Summer League game in Las Vegas comes with a spotlight that’s hard to miss.
On Thursday night, the Utah Jazz rookie will go head-to-head with AJ Dybantsa and the Washington Wizards in what figures to be the most watched game of the opening day at NBA Summer League. The matchup is scheduled for an 8 p.m.
Central tip at UNLV’s Thomas and Mack Center and will be shown on ESPN. The 18,776-seat arena is one of the two venues hosting all 76 games over the next 11 days, along with the adjacent Cox Pavilion.
The buzz makes sense. Peterson went No. 2 in the 2026 NBA Draft, while Dybantsa was the No. 1 pick. They already know each other well.
Their lone college meeting came on Jan. 31 at Allen Fieldhouse, when Peterson’s Kansas team beat Dybantsa’s BYU squad 90-82. Peterson also beat Dybantsa twice during their senior seasons in prep school.
“I’m motivated for every game, but obviously that one is going to be a big one,” Peterson told the Deseret News when asked about the Vegas opener. “I think it’s more just Utah versus Washington, but obviously it’s going to be gassed up that way, so I definitely just want to try to help my team win.”
Peterson’s freshman season at Kansas was strong from the start. The 6-foot-6 combo guard averaged 20.2 points per game. Dybantsa, a 6-9 forward in his lone season in Provo, Utah, led the NCAA in scoring at 25.5 points per game.
Their college matchup was tight on the stat sheet, too. Peterson finished with 18 points in KU’s eight-point win, edging Dybantsa’s 17.
In that game, Peterson scored 18 on 6-of-7 shooting and added three steals in the first half alone. Dybantsa had just seven points as Kansas built a 53-33 halftime lead.
Peterson left for good with 16:46 remaining because of leg cramps, and BYU used his absence to trim the margin to four late, but the Cougars never completed the comeback.
Dybantsa shot 6 of 12 and finished with one rebound and one assist in 34 minutes. Peterson went 6 of 8 from the field, with three rebounds, three steals and one assist in 20 minutes.
Their prep-school battles were just as competitive. On Feb. 8, 2025 in Atlanta, Peterson scored 58 points and added seven rebounds, five assists and three steals in Prolific Prep’s 88-86 win over Utah Prep.
He also buried the game-winning 3 with four seconds left. Earlier that season, on Dec. 14, 2024 in Henderson, Nevada, Peterson outscored Dybantsa 32-28 in another Prolific Prep victory, 76-70, while also posting 10 rebounds and eight assists.
“Obviously when we step on the court we are trying to go at each other,” Peterson told ESPN. “So that’s what we always do. I’ve been blessed to come out on top every time.”
Utah Jazz summer team coach Steve Wojciechowski said the headline matchup still has to fit inside a team setting. Speaking to the Deseret News, he said: “As great as certain players are, it’s still a team sport.
For all these guys in summer league, this experience is so valuable for their individual journeys. (But) the game of basketball is still a shared experience, so the more you pour into the shared experience, in my judgment, the more your individual abilities come out, and I think Darryn has a pretty good grasp on that.”
Peterson has already shown plenty in Utah’s summer action. He scored 28 points against the Atlanta Hawks and followed that with 25 points and 12 assists against Memphis in Salt Lake City on Saturday and Monday.
In the Memphis game, Cameron Boozer, the No. 3 pick in the 2026 draft, scored 18 points and grabbed seven rebounds for the Grizzlies. Dybantsa’s Washington team did not take part in the Salt Lake City summer league or the California Classic, which means Thursday will be his pro debut.
Peterson said he was especially locked in for the matchup with Boozer.
“He was the pick after me, so I know he probably had an agenda today as well,” Peterson told the Deseret News. “I couldn’t let that ride.”
In Other News...
Darryn Peterson Just Reopened A Painful Bill Self Debate At Kansas
Darryn Petersons first NBA Summer League game with the Utah Jazz offered a fresh look at what Kansas fans thought they were getting when the former five-star arrived in Lawrence. Peterson said he is enjoying being on the ball as a point guard at the next level, a role that has let him handle more of the offense than he did at Kansas, where he spent much of his time working as a shooting guard and wing option.
That contrast has reopened an old discussion around Bill Selfs usage of Peterson and whether the Jayhawks ever found the best way to deploy him. Selfs side of it was always tied to roster needs and Petersons availability, with cramping issues and injuries limiting how often Kansas could build around him, but the NBA setting is putting the difference in roles back in the spotlight. [Read more 🡒]
Lance Leipold Just Addressed Kansas Fans' Biggest Wembley Fear
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Leipold also tied that stability to the changing college football landscape, saying the new revenue-sharing model has helped Kansas allocate resources more effectively. He added that the single transfer portal window has made it easier to keep the roster together, and for a team that has been searching for a better way to finish tight games, that kind of continuity could be as important as any single player on the depth chart. [Read more 🡒]
