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AJ Dybantsa
#01
SF · BYU

AJ Dybantsa

Pistons Fit
85/100
Rating
68/100
Long shot
The Verdict

AJ Dybantsa is the BYU wing every mock has going #1 or #2 overall. Picture a 6'8.5" forward who already scores like a guard — pull-ups, step-backs, two-foot finishes through bigger bodies — and can switch onto three positions on defense. The catch is he's still 18, so the shot selection and reads come and go. He's not realistically falling to #21, but he's the bar every other wing on this board gets measured against.

Archetype
Three-level scoring engine at 6'8.5"
For Detroit
Ceiling pick. Pairs with Cade as a primary creator and elite perimeter stopper.
Swing Question
Decision-making and shot selection still process-heavy
Latest Buzz

Combine intel pending. Measurements, workout reports, and team interviews land here as they break.

Per-36 Stats

26.5
PTS/36
7.1
REB/36
3.9
AST/36
1.4
3PM/36
1.1
STL/36
0.4
BLK/36

BYU · 35 GP · 34.8 MPG · static profile seed

FG%
51.0%
3P%
33.1%
TS%
61.4%
USG%
28.1
2026 Combine
NBA.com · Chicago
Height (no shoes)
6'8.5"
Wingspan
7'0.5"
Standing Reach
8'10"
Weight
217 lb
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Motor City Fit Report
Pistons Fit
85/100
Strong Detroit Fit
Fit with the core
  • Cade4/5
  • Ausar2/5
  • Duren5/5
  • Grit4/5
TL;DR

Ceiling pick. Pairs with Cade as a primary creator and elite perimeter stopper.

The full read

Detroit moving up to grab Dybantsa would be a franchise-altering swing. The fit next to Cade Cunningham is seamless: a 6'8.5" wing who can attack closeouts, defend three positions, and absorb tough on-ball assignments. Slots in immediately as the franchise's long-term #2 option and lets Ausar Thompson roam as a help defender. Realistic only via trade-up.

Scouting Room · For the Draft Sickos

The Report

Dybantsa is the rare 6'8.5" wing who already projects as a primary scorer on day one. He's averaging 23.0 a game on 51% from the floor and 78% from the line on heavy volume, and the way he generates that scoring is what makes him special: only 20% of his rim makes and 12% of his mid-range twos are assisted. He's creating his own shot at a level almost nobody his size has ever flashed in college.

The pull-up game is the headliner — 47% on dribble two-point jumpers per Synergy, plus 48% as a pick-and-roll ballhandler. The catch-and-shoot three is genuinely a question (30% guarded C&S) but the off-the-dribble three (36% guarded) and the mid-range craft hint that the catch jumper is a comfort fix, not a mechanical one. Mix in a workable 78% FT and there's no real reason to bet against the shot.

Defensively the tools are obvious — 6'8.5" with a 7'0.5" wingspan and a real first step — but the production lagged at 1.1 SPG / 0.3 BPG with twelve 0-stock games. He fans on the ball and sends help blocks from the weak side, then drifts on screen nav the next possession. Derek Parker pegs roughly 80% of his turnovers as process, not handle: decision-making and shot selection are the swing skills, not athleticism or shooting.

For Detroit, the math only works on a trade-up. But the fit is as clean as it gets: a 6'8.5" wing who can attack closeouts next to Cade, defend three positions, and absorb tough on-ball assignments so Ausar Thompson can roam. That's the long-term #2 the franchise has been hunting since the rebuild started.

Strengths
  • Three-level scoring engine at 6'8.5" — 51% FG on absurd volume, plus a workable 78% FT on 8.5 attempts/g
  • Elite first step and burst for his size — Derek Parker calls it one of the best he's scouted in a 6'8.5" prospect
  • Self-creation that actually held up on tape: just 20% of rim FGs and 12% of mid-range 2s were assisted
  • Mid-range mastery — 47% on 2pt dribble jumpers per Synergy, the kind of pull-up game NBA stars are built on
  • Pick-and-roll handler from day one: 48% as the ballhandler, 51% on 2s, 36% on 3s out of ball screens
  • Switchable 1–4 frame with high-IQ flashes — fans on the ball, flips hips, sends help blocks from the weak side
  • In-season development on tape — looked like a different player by March than he did in November
Weaknesses
  • Decision-making and shot selection is the real swing skill — Parker pegs ~80% of his turnovers as process, not handle
  • Catch-and-shoot 3 is a question (30% guarded C&S, 36% guarded off the dribble) — comfort generating his own looks for now
  • Defensive production lagged the tools — 1.1 SPG / 0.3 BPG, off-ball rotations and screen nav still slow
  • Frame needs another 10–15 lb of NBA functional strength to absorb wing-on-wing contact
  • Handle gets high and loose at times — long strides and reliant spin move mask it, but the dribble itself can tighten
  • Floor-game synchronization comes and goes — seven 5+ turnover games, twelve 0-stock defensive games
Best case for Detroit

Detroit moving up to grab Dybantsa would be a franchise-altering swing.

Biggest concern for Detroit

If decision-making and shot selection still process-heavy never resolves, decision-making and shot selection is the real swing skill — parker pegs ~80% of his turnovers as process, not handle

What would need to be true

He answers the open questions below — film, role, and reps between now and June.

Three Questions

  1. Does the catch-and-shoot three (30% guarded C&S) come around fast enough to keep him on the floor next to a primary creator on day one?· debate →

  2. How quickly does the defensive production catch up to the tools — does the off-ball IQ and screen nav settle by the second NBA contract?· debate →

  3. Can the decision-making clean up to where he's a true #1 option, or does his best version live a half-step behind the elite shot-creators?· debate →

See the room argue it out

Open the Draft Room debate

Where Scouts Disagree

Nobody questions Dybantsa's tools — the split is over the offensive engine. Some boards see a future #1 option; others quietly worry he's a high-end secondary creator if the handle and shot don't tighten up.

Generational #1 option

Size, shot diet, and self-creation reps already track ahead of his age — he's the rare wing who can be the best player on a contender.

Elite #2, not a true alpha

The tight handle and streaky pull-up cap his usage. Best version is a Tatum/PG-style co-star, not the engine.

Reader Poll
Where do you land on Dybantsa's ceiling?
Film Room
Film Room
What the film says
  • First step at 6'8.5" is the move the whole highlight reel hangs on — Parker calls it one of the best burst profiles he's scouted at that size, and on tape defenders concede the preferred shoulder almost every possession.
  • The pull-up mid-range is a finished NBA move, not college-leverage scoring: 47% on dribble two-point jumpers per Synergy, plus 48% efficiency as the pick-and-roll handler and 36% on PnR threes.
  • Self-creation actually held up under the microscope — only 20% of his rim FGs and 12% of his mid-range twos were assisted. The 51/78 efficiency is on volume he's generating himself, not on layups gifted off drives.
  • Catch-and-shoot three is the only real shot-profile flag (30% guarded C&S), but 36% guarded off-the-dribble and 78% from the FT line have Parker reading it as a comfort fix, not a mechanics issue.
  • Defensive production lags badly behind the tools — 1.1 SPG / 0.3 BPG with twelve 0-stock games — and Parker pegs roughly 80% of the turnovers as decision-making, not handle. The All-NBA case is gated by feel and rotations, not athleticism.
Highlights
AJ Dybantsa — 2025-26 Season Highlights
No Ceilings NBA
Analyst Breakdown
AJ Dybantsa Scouting Report | 2026 NBA Draft
Derek Parker / NBA Draft Space

Consensus

SourceRank #
ESPN
#1
The Ringer
#1
Bleacher Report
#1
Consensus avg
#1.5

Each outlet's evaluation of the player's pure value, ignoring team fit. Bars scale inversely to rank.

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