The Knicks are wasting no time getting back on the floor. Less than a month after winning the NBA Finals, New York opens its 2026 Summer League run on Friday in Las Vegas, where the focus shifts from championship hardware to player development and roster auditions.
This trip to Vegas comes with a lot to track, starting with a guard group that includes Jaden Akins, Will Johnston, Oziyah Sellers, Erik Reynolds II, Treysen Eaglestaff and Jack Kayil. Kayil is the name drawing the most attention. He was the Knicks’ top pick of the draft at No. 39, and he only got clearance from his overseas rights holder at the last minute so he could suit up in Summer League.
There’s real curiosity around what Kayil can show, especially because his selection wasn’t the one most people expected. But he’s not the only backcourt player worth watching.
Akins averaged 14.7 ppg and 4.4 apg in the G League this season, while St. John’s alum Oziyah Sellers also has a chance to make noise.
Kayil’s exact role is still up in the air.
The wing and forward group is even deeper, which fits the Knicks’ roster shape. Dillon Jones, Pacôme Dadiet, Toby Okani, Akoi Yuot, Keith Palek III, Langston Wilson, Mohamed Diawara, Tyler Nickel and Nick Jourdain are all in the mix. Dadiet and Diawara stand out most because they’re already young NBA pieces New York has been developing at the end of the bench.
Jones is another interesting case. He’s trying to earn his way back after spending last season on a two-way deal. Nickel, meanwhile, is a rookie draft pick who could push for immediate minutes if his shooting translates from college.
The center spot may end up being one of the more important evaluations in Vegas. New York is taking a close look at Liam Robins, a 7-foot-1 big man, and Lance Ware, who stands 6-foot-10. Robins brings a little NBA history too, with 13 appearances over two seasons, and his size, shot-blocking and floor-stretching potential make him a legitimate flyer.
T.J. Saint will coach the Summer League team, with the rest of the staff still to be determined. Saint joined the Knicks in 2025 under Mike Brown, and now gets the job after Chris Jent guided the team to the title in Las Vegas last year.
The schedule is a busy one right away. New York’s first four games are against the Nets on 7/10, the Spurs on 7/11, the Pistons on 7/13 and the Warriors on 7/16. After that stretch, the Knicks’ record will decide whether they advance to a playoff game for their fifth outing or settle for one final exhibition.
That opening slate also puts New York in front of several notable rookies, including Brooklyn’s Mikel Brown Jr. (No. 6 overall pick) and Joshua Jefferson (No. 28 pick), San Antonio’s Jayden Quaintance (No. 20 pick) and Tarris Reed Jr. (No. 26 pick), and Golden State’s Yaxel Lendeborg (No. 11 pick).
For the Knicks, the biggest Summer League storyline may be Dadiet. He has not managed to lock down a rotation role in two seasons, and his $2.9 million price tag for 2026-27 makes him a candidate who could be traded if New York wants to chase a more useful piece. A strong showing in Vegas could either help the Knicks rethink moving on from the 2024 first-round pick or make him more appealing as trade bait.
Diawara has something to prove too. He had a mostly unimpressive postseason and eventually was glued to the bench while the Knicks rolled to the title, so Summer League gives him a chance to reset the conversation and build momentum heading into his second year. New York clearly sees him as a developmental piece, which is why it gave him a four-year contract extension this summer, though the team also built in an easy out after two seasons.
There are fresh faces worth monitoring beyond the drafted rookies. Akins, who was a G League All-Star this past season, and Sellers both arrive as new auditions for New York and the league at large. With Tyler Kole left off the team, there’s also extra playing time available for someone to seize.
Robbins could be especially interesting if he puts it together quickly. Given the Knicks’ lack of center depth, a true seven-footer who can protect the rim and rebound has a real path to earning a contract.
Okani and Jourdain, both members of the G League affiliate, will also have a chance to strengthen their standing in the organization. Jones is in that same fight, looking for another two-way opportunity while competing with the rookies for one of the limited spots.
In Other News...
Knicks Title Defense Looks Safer With One East Rival Fading
The Knicks entered the summer with a title in hand and the kind of target on their backs that comes with it, but one potential roadblock in the East looks a little less imposing than it did a year ago. Detroit still has Cade Cunningham, and that alone keeps the Pistons relevant, yet their early playoff exit and busy offseason reshuffle have left them looking more like a team trying to find its next step than one ready to challenge the champs.
For New York, the bigger picture is that the conference still figures to be crowded with threats. Miami, Philadelphia, Boston, Indiana, Cleveland and Toronto all have reasons to believe they can be better, which means the Knicks will not get a free pass just because one rival is fading. Even so, Detroits current path feels harder to sell as a true title threat, and in an East where scoring depth and roster balance matter more than ever, that matters for the Knicks margin for error. [Read more 🡒]
Knicks Summer League Just Got Tougher For Young Guards Trying To Stick
A late roster addition has changed the feel of the Knicks Summer League backcourt before the games even start. Jack Kayil received permission from his European club to join New Yorks summer roster after the initial group had already been announced, and his arrival gives the Knicks another guard to sort through as they evaluate younger talent in Las Vegas.
For players like Jaden Akins, Keith Palek III and Treysen Eaglestaff, that means the margin for minutes just got thinner. Summer League is always a proving ground, but T.J. Saint may lean heavily on Kayil and a few other priority pieces, leaving the rest of the guard group fighting for every chance to show they belong. [Read more 🡒]
One Young Knick Could Quietly Change New Yorks Next Big Move
The Knicks have spent much of the offseason looking for ways to sharpen the main roster, and the center market has naturally been part of that conversation. One name that keeps coming up in that broader picture is Pacme Dadiet, a young wing who has barely seen NBA minutes but has shown enough in the G League to keep people around the team interested in what he might become.
Dadiet is in Summer League now, and that matters because his value may be tied as much to this stretch as to anything he has done before. A strong showing could make him a more credible trade chip if New York decides to chase a more impactful backup center, and the Knicks would love for that kind of flexibility to come from a player whose stock is still moving rather than one already at its peak. [Read more 🡒]
