The Grizzlies made real noise around the 2026 NBA Draft lottery, and one of the bigger swings they reportedly explored was a shot at the Clippers’ No. 5 pick.
ESPN’s Jeremy Woo reported Sunday that Memphis was “in pursuit” of that selection, but Los Angeles turned it down and stayed at No. 5 to take Illinois guard Keaton Wagler.
The Hawks also tried to get into that spot, according to the reporting, but the Clippers held firm.
What matters most here is that Memphis wasn’t trying to slide out of No. 3.
Zach Kleiman was looking to climb from No. 16 and grab a second top-five pick, which is a very different kind of gamble. The Grizzlies’ appetite for moving up had already been floating around league circles, and for a team that usually keeps things close to the vest, the interest was reported more than once.
A lot of the buzz centered on guards. The idea was that Memphis might pair Cameron Boozer, the eventual No. 3 pick, with another backcourt piece such as Wagler, Darius Acuff Jr, Kingston Flemings, Mikel Brown Jr., or Brayden Burries. All five were projected as top-10 selections, and that’s exactly how it played out.
If the Grizzlies had gotten to No. 5, Wagler would have been the obvious name to watch.
There was already some early groundwork, too. According to a source, Kleiman met with the 19-year-old in early May, before the lottery. At that point, Memphis still didn’t know where its own first-rounder would land, but the team had clearly taken a strong look at Wagler.
Before the lottery, the Grizzlies were most likely to end up at No. 7 or No. 8, both spots that fit Wagler’s range. Their chances of jumping into the top four were 37.2 percent, and that’s where the lottery broke for them.
The cost to go from No. 16 all the way to No. 5 would have been steep. With the 2026 class drawing so much interest, especially in the lottery, the price of picks was higher than usual. That made a move into the late lottery, rather than the top five, the more realistic path for Memphis.
And if that had happened, the target likely would have shifted to the frontcourt. Once the top tier of guards was projected to go early, a move into the 11-16 range probably would have meant a big man or forward, which would have addressed a need on the Memphis roster. In my personal mock draft on draft day, I projected the Grizzlies to trade up to No. 13 for Michigan 6-10 forward Morez Johnson Jr.
Johnson wound up going earlier than expected. Dallas, which hired his college coach Dusty May as its new coach, took Johnson at No. 9.
Instead of landing a second lottery pick, Memphis went the other direction twice. The Grizzlies sent No. 16 to the Oklahoma City Thunder for No. 17 and two second-round picks, then flipped No. 17 to the Detroit Pistons for No. 21 and three second-rounders.
At No. 21, Memphis selected New Zealand Breakers wing Karim Lopez. The three second-round picks from Detroit later went back to the Pistons in the deal for C/F Isaiah Stewart.
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Around the league, that sort of contract has started to invite speculation, and Memphis has been loosely connected to possible trade ideas that would send Aldama elsewhere in exchange for future value or roster balance. The New Orleans and Oklahoma City possibilities have both been floated in that conversation, which is a reminder that the Grizzlies are still working through the cost of their reset and may not be done making painful choices about which names from the last core survive the transition. [Read more 🡒]
Karim Lopez Faces His First Real Chance To Win Over Grizzlies Fans
Karim Lopezs arrival gives the Grizzlies another young piece to sort through after taking him 21st overall in the 2026 NBA Draft, and he comes with a profile Memphis tends to appreciate. The 19-year-old spent two seasons with the New Zealand Breakers in the NBL, where his physicality and passing flashed enough to make him a notable prospect, and now he gets his first real stage with NBA Summer League in front of him.
For Memphis, the appeal is obvious: Lopez already looks like the kind of wing-sized player who can do more than one thing, even if the shot and the on-ball creation still leave room for questions. Summer League gives him a clean chance to make a first impression, and if he translates the same toughness and playmaking he showed overseas, he could quickly become one of the more interesting names in the Grizzlies offseason mix. [Read more 🡒]
