AJ Dybantsa Faces Immediate Pressure In Wizards Summer League Debut

Peterson's early performances set the stage for an enticing showdown with top pick Dybantsa in the highly anticipated NBA Summer League.

Darryn Peterson is wasting no time turning Summer League into a stage of his own.

While most of the NBA’s rookie class is still waiting for the Las Vegas spotlight, Peterson and the Utah Jazz got an early start, and he has already put together two straight outings with at least 25 points. In his second Summer League game against the Grizzlies, Peterson posted 25 points on 8-of-15 shooting, hit 3 of 9 from deep, and added 12 assists, 2 rebounds, 2 steals and 1 block.

That kind of production has only reinforced the buzz around him. Peterson was widely viewed as the top talent in this draft class by plenty of observers, and his early scoring binge has done nothing to cool that conversation.

His game has long carried the same calling card: shot-making that can break a defense, plus the kind of disruptive defense that made him stand out at the college level. He showed those traits in his lone matchup with eventual draft headliner AJ Dybantsa, and now the two are headed for another look at each other when Washington’s Summer League run begins in Las Vegas.

Dybantsa ended up going No. 1 over Peterson in the Wizards’ eyes, but Peterson will arrive in Vegas already rolling. And he does not seem interested in treating any of this like a casual exhibition. That edge showed up again in his comments about Cameron Boozer, who was selected after him.

Darryn Peterson on playing against Cam Boozer today:"(Cam Boozer) was the pick after me. So, I know that he probably had an agenda today. I couldn't let that ride." pic.twitter.com/saXB4k1fnP

That sort of mindset is part of what makes the upcoming Wizards-Jazz Summer League meeting worth circling. Washington’s Summer League debut is still two weeks away, but the league is already lining up a fresh storyline around Dybantsa and Peterson.

There’s also the matchup itself. Dybantsa has the size and athletic tools to make life difficult on Peterson, and he did try to defend him in their previous meeting with mixed results. Peterson’s downhill attack has looked sharper than some of the film from Kansas suggested, but Dybantsa’s length and athleticism give Washington a real chance to make this a physical, contested battle.

Offensively, Dybantsa earned the No. 1 pick largely because of his playmaking. He has shown the kind of live-ball passing that 6'9 prospects usually don’t see, much less pull off. Peterson, meanwhile, answered questions about his own passing by handing out a dozen assists against Boozer’s Grizzlies, giving Dybantsa another area to match if he wants to keep pace.

The Wizards have already released their 2026 Summer League roster pic.twitter.com/VgyEU5eJBz

Before Dybantsa has even played a televised game in a Wizards uniform, some fans are already praising the Jazz for landing Peterson instead of Washington. But the bigger question is what happens once the two finally share the floor in Las Vegas.

How Dybantsa looks in that Thursday night matchup will shape plenty of the conversation that follows him into the fall. Alex Sarr’s 0/15 Summer League shooting line still hangs around as a cautionary tale, and this is the first real chance for Washington’s new centerpiece to show he belongs in the spotlight.

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