Jazz Just Got A Front Row Look At A No. 1 Warning

NBA's new top pick AJ Dybantsa made a historic impact in his Summer League debut, matching a record set by Blake Griffin.

AJ Dybantsa wasted no time living up to the noise.

The No. 1 pick in the 2026 NBA Draft stepped into Las Vegas Summer League on Thursday night and delivered the kind of debut that turns heads fast. In Washington’s 92-88 win over the Utah Jazz, Dybantsa finished with 27 points, seven rebounds, two assists, two steals, and a block. He led all scorers and briefly outshined No. 2 pick Darryn Peterson, who put up 24 points, three rebounds, and three assists.

The performance wasn’t just loud - it was historic. Dybantsa’s 27 points tied Blake Griffin for the most points by a No. 1 pick in a Summer League debut.

That puts Dybantsa in rare company. The list of top-scoring debuts by first overall picks includes John Wall at 24 points, Andrew Wiggins at 18, Paolo Banchero and Markelle Fultz at 17, LeBron James at 14, Cade Cunningham at 12, Zion Williamson at 11, and a four-way tie at 10 featuring Cooper Flagg, Derrick Rose, Deandre Ayton, and Ben Simmons. Griffin and Dybantsa sit at the top with 27.

After the game, Dybantsa sounded like a player who knew exactly what he had just put on tape. He said he believed he showed the Wizards what he can do, and he also had a message for the future teammates who were in the building, Anthony Davis and Trae Young. On what he showed them, Dybantsa said:

“A little bit of everything. I tried to defend a little bit, get a couple of blocks, get a couple of steals, rebound the ball well, and obviously just show my scoring ability, and I can space the floor and give those guys an extra ball handler, an extra scorer if they get tired.”

That’s the part that makes the debut even more intriguing. The scoring grabs the spotlight, but Dybantsa’s line showed more than shot-making.

He mixed in defense, rebounding, and playmaking, and he looked comfortable doing it. The source material points to his athleticism and physical tools, but also to something that can be just as valuable for a young player: composure.

Washington’s next stop is Sunday, July 12, when the Wizards face the Sacramento Kings. That matchup will bring Dybantsa and Kings rookie Darius Acuff Jr. into the same game, and after what Dybantsa just did in his first outing, there should be plenty of eyes on it.

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