Less than a month after the Knicks ended a 53-year title drought, the NBA is already back on the calendar - at least in Summer League form. The games in Las Vegas won’t count in the standings, but they’ll give fans their first real look at the league’s newest names, the second-year guys trying to level up, and a few veterans and fringe players chasing a roster spot.
That’s the whole appeal of the 11-day event. It’s early, it’s messy, and it’s exactly where the overreactions begin.
The 2026 rookie class arrives just two weeks after the draft, which means the conversation around picks like AJ Dybantsa and Keaton Wagler starts immediately. The winning team has also received championship rings every year since 2022, so there’s a little extra edge baked into the competition now.
Here are the five matchups that stand out most in Las Vegas.
The offseason’s biggest trade already has a Summer League stage. Milwaukee and Miami meet in a game that ties directly to the deal that sent Giannis Antetokounmpo to the Heat.
The Bucks used the pick they got in that trade to select Nate Ament at No. 13, then added Brayden Burries at No. 10 to give themselves two lottery selections. Kasparas Jakučionis is also on Milwaukee’s Summer League roster after being Miami’s first-round pick last year and coming over in the Antetokounmpo deal.
On the other side, Heat rookie Ryan Conwell is one of the more interesting names to watch.
Atlanta and Brooklyn bring a loaded guard-heavy matchup to the floor. The Hawks took Kingston Flemings at No. 10 and also added Zuby Ejiofor at No. 23, then grabbed Henri Veesaar at No. 52 after a long wait.
Brooklyn countered with Mikel Brown Jr. at No. 10 and has four first-round picks from last year on its Summer League roster: Egor Dёmin, Ben Saraf, Drake Powell and Danny Wolf. There’s plenty of intrigue in how much run the second-year players get, but the rookie talent alone makes this one worth circling.
Michigan’s national championship run sent three players into the lottery, and two of them will face off in Las Vegas. Morez Johnson Jr. went ninth to Dallas and joined Dusty May, now the Mavericks’ head coach.
Aday Mara landed with Oklahoma City at No. 11, and Yaxel Lendeborg went one pick later to Golden State. Johnson and the Mavericks open against Lendeborg and the Warriors, but the later matchup between Lendeborg and Mara is the one that really jumps off the page.
The Thunder also added Bennett Stirtz at No. 16, giving them another prospect with serious shooting ability.
The second night in Las Vegas brings one of the marquee games of the whole event: No. 3 against No. 4.
Memphis took Duke’s Cameron Boozer third, and Chicago followed by selecting North Carolina’s Caleb Wilson one pick later. The Bulls also added Dailyn Swain at No. 15, giving new head coach Tiago Splitter two more pieces for the young core.
Chicago’s roster includes Noa Essengue as well, after last year’s No. 12 pick saw his rookie season end because of shoulder surgery. Memphis has its own depth, with first-round pick Karim López and second-year players Cedric Coward and Walter Clayton Jr. on the roster too.
Still, the headliner is obvious. Washington’s AJ Dybantsa and second pick Darryn Peterson are the names everyone will want to see.
Dybantsa, the high-flying wing from BYU, was at the center of the debate over who Washington should take at No. 1.
Peterson already got a taste of Summer League action in Salt Lake City and flashed the kind of scoring upside that could make him one of the best scorers in the NBA. He dropped 25 points against the Grizzlies in his second Summer League game, and the line told the story: 8-15 FG, 3-9 3PT, 3-3 FTs, 12 AST, 2 REBS, 2 STL, 1 TTM.
That’s the matchup that really defines this Summer League slate. Dybantsa, Peterson and Boozer are going to be linked for a long time, but Las Vegas gives us the first real chance to watch the debate play out in front of us.
Once their careers get rolling, these meetings will be rare. For now, Summer League is where the conversation starts.
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Cedric Coward already gave the Grizzlies plenty to like in his first NBA season after Memphis took him 11th overall in the 2025 draft. He put together a strong rookie year, earned All-Rookie First Team honors and showed enough across 62 games to suggest the franchise may have found a long-term piece on the wing.
Now Coward is back in Summer League, where the early returns have been encouraging. His added strength and defensive activity stand out, and the Grizzlies can see the outline of a valuable two-way player who fits their timeline, even if there is still a part of his offensive game that will determine just how high his ceiling can go. [Read more 🡒]
Grizzlies Young Core Faces Its First Real Vegas Test Tonight
Summer League in Las Vegas is where a young roster stops being a collection of draft-night talking points and starts getting judged on how it functions against real competition. For the Bulls, that means a first look at recent picks Caleb Wilson, Dailyn Swain and Noa Essengue under Tiago Splitter, with Memphis waiting at the Thomas & Mack Center as the kind of opponent that can quickly expose whether the pieces fit or just look promising on paper.
From the Grizzlies side, this is the sort of early test that matters because their own young core is still settling into roles and responsibilities, with a projected lineup that includes Javon Small, Cedric Coward, Oliver-Maxence Prosper, Cameron Boozer and Carson Cooper. The matchup also adds a layer of intrigue because Wilson and Boozer have already been tied together in draft conversation, and their previous college meeting left enough of a footprint to make this one feel like more than a routine July run, even before the ball goes up. [Read more 🡒]
