The 2026 NBA Summer League is still in its early stretch, but the first wave of rookie debuts has already given teams and fans plenty to chew on. Some of the top picks have come out firing.
Others have leaned on feel, defense, or pure poise. A few have shown enough to make it clear they won’t need long to adjust.
Darryn Peterson wasted no time looking like a centerpiece for the Utah Jazz. The No. 2 overall pick finished with 28 points, five rebounds, two assists and two blocks on 11-of-21 shooting, including 4-of-7 from deep, in Utah’s 103-102 overtime win over the Atlanta Hawks.
Peterson scored 18 of his points after halftime and hit the go-ahead three in overtime. The eight turnovers were there, but so was the shot-making and the kind of confidence that jumps off the screen.
Cameron Boozer also made a strong first impression for the Memphis Grizzlies. The No. 3 pick posted 15 points, four rebounds and four assists on 7-of-11 shooting in Memphis’ 111-74 win over the Oklahoma City Thunder. He never tried to force the action, stayed within the flow, and looked comfortable in his first professional game.
Darius Acuff brought the aggression for the Sacramento Kings. The No. 7 pick scored 25 points and added four assists and two rebounds in the 79-76 win over the Brooklyn Nets, even though his shot wasn’t falling at a high rate.
He shot 9-of-29, but he still came through with the game-winning assist. The shot selection will need work, but Summer League is built for that kind of education.
Kingston Flemings had a tougher night with his jumper in Atlanta’s loss to Utah, finishing with 14 points, nine assists and four steals while shooting 4-of-16. Even so, the No. 8 pick kept finding ways to matter.
His passing stood out, and he was active in the lanes all game. Those are the kinds of traits that travel.
Yaxel Lendeborg may have put together the most efficient opening weekend of the bunch for the Golden State Warriors. The No. 11 pick opened with 19 points, five rebounds and six assists on a perfect 6-of-6 shooting and 4-of-4 from three in the Warriors’ 104-72 win over the Los Angeles Lakers.
He backed it up with 11 points, eight rebounds, two assists, two blocks and a steal in the 98-69 win over the San Antonio Spurs. His all-around game is vastly comparable to a young Draymond Green.
Aday Mara gave Oklahoma City something to build on in that same loss to Golden State. The No. 12 pick finished with 10 points, three rebounds, four assists and two blocks on 5-of-8 shooting.
His touch around the basket stood out, but so did his rim protection. The biggest surprise may have been the passing from the post.
Cameron Carr may have done the most to raise his stock of anyone so far. The Lakers’ No. 24 pick scored 26 points and grabbed eight rebounds in the 104-72 loss to the Warriors, then followed it with 19 points, two rebounds and a block in the 93-91 double-overtime loss to the Miami Heat. After two games, he looks like the biggest steal in the draft.
Bennet Stirtz also gave Oklahoma City a steady showing in the loss to Memphis. The No. 17 pick put up 10 points, three rebounds, four assists and three steals, and he looked composed handling both on-ball and off-ball duties. His decision-making was sharp for a rookie.
Zuby Ejiofor didn’t shoot it well for Atlanta, but he still made his presence felt in the 103-102 overtime loss to Utah. The No. 23 pick had eight points, 11 rebounds, two assists and three steals, and his offensive rebounding helped create extra chances for the Hawks.
Tarris Reed Jr. had a rough shooting night for San Antonio in the loss to Golden State, finishing with 10 points, seven rebounds and a block on 3-of-10 shooting. But the No. 26 pick still did the hard work and showed the toughness that made him one of college basketball’s most dependable interior players.
It’s only Summer League, and one or two games won’t tell the whole story. Still, these rookies have already made their point: they’re here, they’re talented, and they’re wasting no time showing why their teams spent so much to get them.
In Other News...
Thunder Rookie Battle Suddenly Feels Bigger Than Anyone Expected
The Thunders rookie big-man picture has gotten a little more interesting than it looked on draft night. Aday Mara arrived as the higher pick and the more obvious long-term project, but his Summer League stretch has already shown some of the adjustment issues that come with jumping into the NBA, especially on defense and with the ball in his hands.
Thomas Sorber, meanwhile, has quietly put himself in the conversation for a roster spot if he gets to camp fully healthy. The draft slotting says Mara should have the edge, but Sorbers prior experience and practice time could make this a real competition for the fourth big-man job, and Oklahoma City has reason to watch closely as both players try to carve out a place. [Read more 🡒]
Thunder Just Made A Lu Dort Call That Says Plenty
The Thunders decision to pick up Lu Dorts club option for the 2026-27 season says plenty about where this roster stands right now. Oklahoma City clearly values the kind of player Dort has become for them, but the move also reflects a practical reality: he looks like the best answer for the teams final roster spot when the alternatives are thin and the market does not offer much help.
For a club trying to balance talent, flexibility and the realities of the cap, this is a meaningful choice. Keeping Dort points to a willingness to live in second-apron territory for the time being, even if that posture could change later. If the Thunder ever decide to move him, it would likely say more about a shift in their cap approach than about Dort himself. [Read more 🡒]
Thunder Suddenly Face One Big Question About Their Title Chances
The Thunder spent the offseason making a few subtle but meaningful tweaks around the edges, dealing Isaiah Joe and Aaron Wiggins for second-round picks and bringing in first-round prospects Aday Mara and Bennett Stirtz. Even with those moves, the bigger picture in Oklahoma City still points to continuity, with Isaiah Hartenstein and Luguentz Dort back in place as the club tries to stay firmly in the Western Conference contender mix.
What makes the conversation more interesting is how the rest of the West is shifting around them. San Antonio and the reigning champion New York Knicks are being cast as the primary threats in the title race, which means Oklahoma City cannot just rely on internal growth to keep pace. The Thunder still profile as one of the teams with the best path to another championship, but the margin for error is getting thinner. [Read more 🡒]
