Draft season has just about arrived in Brooklyn, and this is the Daily News’ latest mock roundup after doing one a few months back. The specific slot is going to keep moving between now and lottery night. The more useful part is the range of outcomes, and the way different outlets are framing the Nets when they’re penciled in near the top of the board.
Here are five projections from five places, with five different flavors of “this is what Brooklyn might need next.”
Darryn Peterson (Tankathon)
Tankathon’s current mock has the Nets picking Darryn Peterson, the Kansas guard, at No. 2. If you want the simplest explanation, it’s this: top-of-the-board teams get linked to the players who can run an offense and create shots. Peterson is that archetype, and Tankathon’s board treats him like the kind of lead option who can reset a rebuild quickly.
AJ Dybantsa (Bleacher Report)
Bleacher Report’s “fresh lottery simulation” mock sends AJ Dybantsa to Brooklyn at No. 2. This is the upside swing Nets fans dream about, a big wing with top-shelf tools. The fit part is almost secondary here. Bleacher Report’s framing is basically that if Brooklyn is sitting this high and Dybantsa is on the board, you don’t complicate it.
Cameron Boozer (ESPN)
ESPN’s early 2026 mock from Jonathan Givony and Jeremy Woo had the Nets taking Cameron Boozer at No. 3. This is the “frontcourt cornerstone” version of the rebuild. When a board puts Boozer with Brooklyn, it’s usually saying the Nets should take the most dependable high-end talent available, even if the roster already has young pieces at the position. In a true reset, you draft the best player and figure out the rest later.
Caleb Wilson (NBADraft.net)
NBADraft.net’s extended mock has Brooklyn selecting Caleb Wilson at No. 5. This is the pivot you start seeing when the Nets slide a spot or two from the very top tier. Wilson shows up as a top-five solution in a lot of “Nets pick fifth” universes, and the logic is straightforward. If the elite creator or elite wing is gone, you can still come away with a premium frontcourt piece.
Darius Acuff Jr. (Yardbarker, via Sports Illustrated)
A Sports Illustrated mock that ran on Yardbarker slotted the Nets at No. 6 and gave them Darius Acuff Jr., the Arkansas guard. This is a different kind of swing, not the headline top-two name, but still a guard who can create offense. It also shows how quickly the board changes once you’re outside the top five. At that point, you start seeing more debate about whether to chase a lead guard, add another wing, or take the best talent left and call it a day.
That’s the big takeaway from this roundup. The Nets’ outcomes tend to fall into a few buckets. Peterson if it’s a pure top-two creator play. Dybantsa if it’s the big wing ceiling play. Boozer or Wilson if the board pushes Brooklyn toward the frontcourt. Acuff if the Nets slip a bit and the conversation turns to who can generate offense anyway.