Former Kansas star Darryn Peterson is about to take his first NBA steps, and the spotlight will be bright from the opening tip. The No. 2 overall pick is scheduled to debut for the Utah Jazz on Saturday against the Atlanta Hawks in the Salt Lake City Summer League, with tipoff set for 5 p.m.
CT (3 p.m. MT) at the Jon M.
Huntsman Center in Salt Lake City.
Fans will have several ways to catch it, with the game airing on Prime Video, ESPNU, NBA League Pass, Jazz+ and KJZZ.
Peterson arrives for his first game in a Jazz uniform after a busy week that included workouts in Utah and a viral clip of him burying three-pointers inside the team’s practice facility. He also signed his rookie contract with the Jazz just days ago, then made it clear he has no interest in easing into his new life.
"The celebration stops tonight," Peterson said. "I got drafted today, but tomorrow, I'm now an NBA player. I'm going to get home and work out until I've got to report to Utah."
That edge has been part of the story around Peterson throughout the draft process, and he said it comes from a familiar source.
"Kobe is my guy, and I'm inspired by him," Peterson said. "I just try to think, what would Kobe do right now? He'd get drafted and move on and try to go be the best possible."
Being picked second overall behind AJ Dybantsa has only added more fuel.
"I see a guy that went No. 1 on the screen there right now, so I'm extra motivated," Peterson said. "It will always be in my mind for my whole career."
Peterson has also said he wants his game to show more than just scoring. Defense is part of the package he wants to bring to Utah.
"I'm a Kobe guy, so he played both sides of the ball," Peterson said. "That's my idol, so I'm trying to lock down on defense."
For Kansas fans, Saturday is the first chance to watch one of the program’s most talented players begin his professional career in an NBA jersey.
In Other News...
Which KU Holdovers Can Still Earn Bigger Roles This Fall
Kansas enters the fall with a familiar kind of offseason question, the sort that usually decides whether a roster merely looks deeper on paper or actually plays that way on Saturdays. Among the holdovers, a few returning names are still in line to matter for the Jayhawks, but their paths are far from settled after a wave of additions changed the look of the depth chart.
Keaton Kubecka, Jack Tanner and Marcus Calvin are each trying to hold off newer faces and carve out bigger roles, and the challenge is different for each of them. Kubecka is in the mix at receiver, Tanner is fighting to stay in the tackle conversation, and Calvin has more bodies around him in the defensive tackle room, leaving Kansas with several veterans who still have something to prove before the season starts to sort itself out. [Read more 🡒]
Darryn Peterson Just Showed Kansas Fans What They Barely Got To See
Darryn Petersons first NBA Summer League game offered a reminder of why Kansas fans spent so much of last season waiting for more. The No. 2 overall pick in the 2026 NBA Draft went to Utah and immediately looked like the kind of scorer who can take over a game, finishing with a game-high 28 points against Atlanta while also adding five rebounds, two assists and two blocks.
For Jayhawks followers, the frustrating part is how little of that version they got to see in Lawrence before his season moved on. Petersons debut also showed the broader package that made him such a rare prospect, and Utahs next chances to keep building around that promise come against Memphis and Oklahoma City as Summer League rolls on. [Read more 🡒]
