The Sacramento Kings didn’t just add a first-round guard in Darius Acuff Jr. - they walked into the week after the 2026 NBA Draft with the basketball world already talking like they might have found the piece that changes everything.
Acuff, the SEC Player of the Year, went No. 7 overall to Sacramento, and the reaction around the league has been overwhelmingly warm. The buzz started right away on draft night, when Kendrick Perkins watched Acuff’s highlights and made his stance clear: "I've got to remind the world, why this man, to me, is the best point guard in this year's draft."
That view didn’t stop with Perkins. Jeff Teague, who had been critical of Acuff before the draft, came around quickly after Sacramento made the pick, saying he "loves Darius Acuff with the Kings." Teague also said the Kings should hand him the ball, let him make mistakes, and let him grow into the job.
DeMarcus Cousins was just as sold. On Bleacher Report’s live draft show, the four-time NBA All-Star said he would be grinning ear to ear if he were in the Kings’ front office, adding that "he's a huge fan" of Acuff. Cousins also framed the pick as more than a talent swing, calling Acuff "a great culture starter for the Kings" while talking about the need to right the ship in Sacramento.
The Kings’ decision lines up with the way the pre-draft process was trending. As the weeks wore on, Acuff increasingly looked like Sacramento’s target, and General Manager Scott Perry made the move.
The teams picking just ahead of the Kings went a different direction, with the Los Angeles Clippers taking Illinois’ Keaton Wagler at No. 5 and the Brooklyn Nets selecting Louisville’s Mikel Brown Jr. at No. 6.
Acuff has done his part to fuel the optimism, too. He told media, "I wanted to be a King, for sure... this is definitely my best destination.
I'm excited to be here." At his introductory press conference, he kept the focus where he wants it, saying, "More than anything I want to win," and adding, "I think we are all here to win.
That's what we want to do."
That message lands in a place that badly needs a reset. Sacramento finished tied for last in the Western Conference with just 22 wins last season, so the bar for improvement is low on paper. But the conversation around Acuff has gone well beyond simple win total math.
Former Kings head coach Jerry Reynolds made the boldest statement of all, saying he’d "be surprised if he’s not the best guard to ever play in Sacramento." Reynolds compared Acuff’s game to a young Kyrie Irving, pointing to his finishing ability at the rim and the sneaky strength he brings for his size.
For now, Acuff is stepping into a franchise that seems eager to believe in him. The praise has come fast, and it has come from plenty of corners. The next challenge is turning all that early confidence into something real once the games start.
In Other News...
Kings Just Sent Another Clear Message About Their Backcourt Future
The back end of Sacramentos roster has been in motion for a while, and Killian Hayes is the latest guard to lose his spot. The Kings brought him in during an injury-ravaged stretch of the 2025-26 season, first on short-term help and later on a deal with a team option, but the move always looked like a stopgap rather than a long-term commitment.
What comes next says even more about how the Kings view their backcourt. Daeqwon Plowden has been in the mix and has flashed enough to stay on the staffs radar, and the organization is now weighing a bigger role for him as it trims down its guard picture. For a team trying to sort out who really belongs in the rotation, this is another small but telling signal about where the future is headed. [Read more 🡒]
Kings Free Agency Plan May Signal A Much Bigger Frontcourt Shakeup
The Kings are heading into free agency with more frontcourt questions than usual, and Precious Achiuwa looks like one of the cleaner answers on their board. Sacramento is expected to pursue a return for the big man, a move that would keep a familiar piece in place while the team sorts through a busier set of possibilities around its interior rotation.
At the same time, the picture around the rest of the front line is anything but settled. There has been ongoing buzz around Jonathan Kuminga, though the reporting on Sacramentos level of interest has not been consistent, and Russell Westbrook is also expected to move on even as Washington has shown some interest. Taken together, it has the feel of a summer in which the Kings may be preparing for a much bigger reshuffle than a routine depth move. [Read more 🡒]
Kings Free Agency Buzz Just Raised The Stakes On A Franchise Pivot
The opening of free agency always tends to ripple beyond the teams making the first splash, and Sacramento has already been pulled into the conversation. Around the league, the Warriors are being tied to a possible run at LeBron James and a trade for Anthony Davis, while Kristaps Porziis has already agreed to stay in Golden State and Draymond Green and De'Anthony Melton have declined their options. For the Kings, that kind of early movement matters because the West is shifting quickly, and every front office is watching which names come off the board first.
Zach LaVines decision to opt into his contract for 2026-27 is another piece of the domino chain, especially with other contract calls and trade discussions still taking shape. Sacramento has spent the opening stretch of free agency in the same current as the rest of the league, where one move can alter the market for everyone else, and the next few days could tell the Kings whether they are looking at a narrow upgrade path or something far more dramatic. [Read more 🡒]
