Hunter Dickinson is getting another shot to make the NBA answer a question that has followed him since draft night: can his game translate from college dominance to the pro level?
The 7-foot-1 center officially re-signed a two-way contract with New Orleans on July 4, and that keeps him in the Pelicans’ plans for another season of development. Dickinson also turned down more lucrative overseas opportunities, choosing to stay in the fight for a permanent NBA role rather than cashing in elsewhere.
His next test comes in Las Vegas, where he’ll play for the Pelicans in the 2026 NBA Summer League under assistant coach God Shammgod. For Dickinson, that stage is more than a tune-up. It’s another chance to show that one of college basketball’s most accomplished careers can carry over to the league.
The path he’s taking isn’t the easy one. After going undrafted in 2025 despite a standout run in college, Dickinson could have headed to Europe, where his old-school post game would have been highly valued. Instead, he stayed put and signed another two-way deal, which will have him split time between New Orleans and the Laketown Squadron while remaining eligible to appear in up to 50 NBA games during the 2026-27 season.
That kind of patience says plenty about how he views his own upside.
Dickinson’s college résumé was hard to ignore. Over three seasons at Michigan and two more at Kansas, he was a steady double-double threat and one of the country’s best low-post scorers. At 7-foot-1 and 271 pounds, he built his reputation on elite post footwork, soft touch around the rim, excellent passing from the low block, high basketball IQ, outstanding defensive rebounding, and strong leadership and experience.
Still, the NBA didn’t call his name.
The reasons teams passed were rooted in the way the league has changed. Scouts had questions about his defensive mobility in space, especially in a game that asks centers to handle quicker guards and survive in switch-heavy schemes. His style also leaned traditional - back-to-the-basket scoring, strong interior work, the kind of game that once defined the position but now has to fit around speed, spacing, and versatility.
Then there was the shot. Dickinson showed flashes from the perimeter in college, but evaluators wanted more proof that he could consistently stretch defenses.
His brief rookie stint didn’t settle that debate either, since he went 0-for-4 from three-point range in limited NBA action. At 24 years old when he entered the draft, he also didn’t have the age advantage that often helps younger prospects sell teams on long-term upside.
That’s why Summer League matters so much here. It’s not just about putting up numbers. It’s about showing growth where it counts.
For New Orleans, the checklist is pretty clear. Can Dickinson defend pick-and-roll action?
Can he recover when pulled away from the basket? Can he improve his conditioning enough to change how teams view his mobility?
Can he knock down open threes with enough consistency to become a real floor-spacing option? Can he use his size to protect the rim more effectively?
The Pelicans have reasons to keep investing. His offensive skill set gives him a different kind of value than most bigs on the roster.
Size, touch, and passing from the center spot are not easy traits to find. If he keeps making progress defensively and adds range to his game, he could become a more interesting fit in New Orleans’ frontcourt mix.
There’s also the experience factor. Dickinson has already been through a lot at the college level, and that makes him useful beyond his own development. He can be a voice for younger players learning the ropes inside the organization.
What the Pelicans will really be watching is broader than scoring. Defensive positioning, screen setting, rebounding consistency, passing decisions, floor spacing, conditioning, and overall effort will all matter. If he handles those pieces well, his role could grow during the season.
That’s the real story here. Dickinson already proved he could dominate college basketball. Now he’s trying to prove something harder: that his game can adapt.
By staying with New Orleans and taking the two-way route again, he’s made the choice to earn it the long way. Las Vegas is the next stop, and for Dickinson, it’s another chance to push toward the full-time NBA role he’s still chasing.
In Other News...
Pelicans Summer League Could Reveal What This New Regime Really Wants
The Summer League in Las Vegas is usually where teams sort through fringe roster hopefuls and recent draft picks, but for the Pelicans it arrives with a little more weight this year. Under new executive vice president Joe Dumars, head coach Jamahl Mosley and assistant God Shammgod, the tournament will serve as an early look at how the new regime wants to evaluate young talent, coach on the fly and shape the next layer of the roster.
Kobe Bufkin and Hunter Dickinson are among the most closely watched names, while Melvin Council Jr., Chris Bell, Christian Shumate, Jalon Moore and Malik Dia are all trying to turn summer minutes into something more permanent. The bigger question is what New Orleans values most in those evaluations, because the mix of two-way and roster battles should tell a lot about the direction this front office wants to take, even if the clearest answer does not come until the games start. [Read more 🡒]
Pelicans Trade Target Could Force A Huge Frontcourt Decision
The Pelicans are weighing a frontcourt move that would bring a very different look to their rotation, one centered on adding a big man who can stretch the floor and protect the rim. For a team trying to balance size, spacing and defensive reliability, that kind of fit is easy to understand, especially when the current roster could use another interior presence who does more than just occupy space near the basket.
Still, the appeal comes with real roster math attached. New Orleans would have to decide how much it is willing to give up to make the numbers work, and there are already questions about whether the player in question gives enough on the glass to justify the investment. The Pelicans have avenues to explore through salary matching and protected draft capital, but any serious pursuit would force them to confront a frontcourt decision that could shape the next few seasons. [Read more 🡒]
