Badger fans hoping to track a crowded Wisconsin contingent through the NBA Summer League are going to have a shorter list than usual this year.
The next stop on the basketball calendar is almost here, and Summer League remains the same proving ground it always has been: a place for young players to earn attention, and for veterans to fight their way back into the league. Wisconsin has usually had at least a few familiar names in that mix. This time, though, the Badgers are underrepresented, and some of the most recognizable former Wisconsin players are still waiting without a Summer League landing spot.
That absence stands out because Wisconsin has had plenty of success sending players into this setting in past years. In 2025, for example, the Utah Jazz alone carried three Badgers - Steven Crowl, Max Klesmit and John Tonje - on their Summer League roster. As things stand now, none of those three has landed a Summer League deal.
Klesmit’s situation is the least surprising. His shot-making and toughness were enough to earn him a brief NBA look, but the rest of his game never quite offered the kind of polish that keeps a player around for long. The opportunity came and went.
Crowl and Tonje are harder to explain away. Crowl fits the mold of the modern big man: he can stretch the floor, pass from the post and protect the rim. His athletic ceiling was always going to be a question, but being out of the NBA conversation by Year 2 is still a bit of a shock.
Tonje is the biggest surprise of the group. A year ago, he looked like a player teams would want to keep close.
Age was always going to matter in his evaluation, but his ability to create shots and his feel for the game seemed enough to keep him in the pipeline. Instead, after a year of moving through the G League and two-way situations, he’s currently without an NBA job at all.
Johnny Davis is another former Badger who still hasn’t found a Summer League home. His NBA path has been rough from the start, and the source of that trouble traces back to the Washington Wizards immediately changing his jump shot after drafting him.
That decision, the report notes, hurt every part of his development. Since that short run in Washington, Davis still hasn’t found another NBA opportunity, not even a Summer League roster spot, even as some players from his draft class continue to get chances.
There is still time for names to be added before the Las Vegas Summer League begins in more than a week. Even so, Wisconsin’s footprint is clearly smaller than fans have grown used to. Chucky Hepburn and Nick Boyd are still expected to play, but beyond that, the Badgers’ presence in Vegas looks light.
In Other News...
Max Klesmit Just Landed A Chance To Revive His Pro Career
Max Klesmits next stop gives him a fresh chance to get his pro career moving after a quiet stint in the NBA G League. The former Wisconsin guard has signed his first overseas contract, a notable step for a player who is still trying to find the right stage to show the game that made him a familiar name in Madison.
His new club competes in the top tier of the BNXT League and just won a championship in 2025, so this is not a developmental detour so much as an opportunity to join a winning environment with real expectations. After limited playing time with the Salt Lake City Stars, Klesmit now gets the kind of runway that can matter for a player looking to rebuild momentum and prove he belongs in the pro ranks. [Read more 🡒]
Greg Gard Has A Wisconsin Rotation Squeeze To Solve
Greg Gards offseason puzzle in Madison is less about finding talent than deciding how much of it he can actually fit on the floor. Wisconsin looks headed toward a nine- or 10-man rotation, with a projected starting group already taking shape and a few spots still open to competition as the Badgers sort out who can handle the biggest responsibilities when the games start to matter.
The real squeeze comes in the backcourt and on the margins, where freshmen and returners are all pressing for a look. Gards lean is to reward defensive reliability, especially in ball-screen coverage and positioning, so the battle is not just about who can score but who can stay on the court without breaking the structure. That leaves a few young players in developmental roles for now, while one sophomores growth on defense could end up changing the math before long. [Read more 🡒]
Badgers Commit Jack Tabbert Sounds Exactly Like Wisconsin Wants
Jack Tabberts path to Wisconsin already has the kind of homegrown feel the Badgers tend to like. The 2027 commit came through the programs prospect camp, left with an offer and then turned that visit into a pledge, a quick sequence that fits the way Wisconsin has tried to build its future class. Tabbert also arrives with a little extra credibility from outside football, having helped Pewaukee win a state baseball title and showing the sort of all-around competitiveness that usually plays well in Madison.
Now comes the part Wisconsin will be watching closely: how that momentum carries into a packed summer and then into the fall. Tabbert has talked about the strong community inside the class and the work ahead in workouts, while also keeping his eyes on a bigger goal with Pewaukee this season. For a program that values players who fit its culture as much as its depth chart, he sounds like the kind of addition that can matter long before he ever steps on campus. [Read more 🡒]
