{"id":611315,"date":"2026-02-19T09:25:44","date_gmt":"2026-02-19T09:25:44","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nba\/611315\/"},"modified":"2026-02-19T09:25:44","modified_gmt":"2026-02-19T09:25:44","slug":"inside-aj-dybantsas-bold-decision-to-try-to-lift-byu-basketball-to-historic-heights","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nba\/611315\/","title":{"rendered":"Inside AJ Dybantsa\u2019s Bold Decision to Try to Lift BYU Basketball to Historic Heights"},"content":{"rendered":"<p id=\"inline-text-0\" class=\"!mt-[30px] first-letter:float-left first-letter:text-[48px] first-letter:leading-[48px] md:first-letter:text-[54px] md:first-letter:leading-[54px] first-letter:pr-1.5 mt-[18px] md:mt-0 mb-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"5s\">High up in the rafters of the Marriott Center is a large, empty space between a pair of Naismith Hall of Fame banners. Just five retired numbers flank the two dark blue emblems celebrating the induction of BYU head coach Stan Watts, who led the team from 1949 to \u201972, and former star player Kresimir Cosic, who graduated in 1973.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-1\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"5v\">Nestled under a picturesque mountain backdrop, the nondescript building that Watts and Cosic are said to have helped build is a place full of history\u2014just not all of it distinguished. The Cougars sit firmly atop the list of programs with the most NCAA tournament appearances without having made it to the Final Four. And it takes some creative accounting, with all due respect to Converse Yearbook fourth-teamers, to find the 27 players who earned some form of an All-American nod in more than a century\u2019s worth of play.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-2\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"5y\">It is here, between the two banners, that freshman AJ Dybantsa aims to fill the emptiness.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/images2.minutemediacdn.com\/image\/upload\/c_crop,x_0,y_0,w_0,h_0\/c_fill,w_16,ar_16:9,f_auto,q_auto,g_auto\/images\/voltaxMediaLibrary\/mmsport\/si\/01khpwcwhx8mc7q0j6x1.jpg\" alt=\"BYU forward AJ Dybantsa\" title=\"BYU forward AJ Dybantsa\" width=\"0\" class=\"undefined w-full w-full blur-[5px]\" q:id=\"68\"\/><\/p>\n<p>Erick W. Rasco\/Sports Illustrated<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-4\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"6c\">Perhaps another Hall of Fame banner raised smack dab in the middle of the two existing ones. A colorful Final Four logo hung for the first time. Or a few more years down the line, a white No. 3 hanging alongside the numbers of Cosic, Danny Ainge, Mel Hutchins, Roland Minson and Jimmer Fredette.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-5\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"6f\">Dybantsa speaks suavely about such aims, with a type of self-assurance that most top talents have learned to foster over the years, straddling the line between lofty confidence and arrogance. What\u2019s different about Dybantsa, though, is simply that he\u2019s doing so in Provo, Utah.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-6\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"6i\">\u201cIf I\u2019m being completely honest, I didn\u2019t envision myself being at BYU. I didn\u2019t think I was going to be in Utah [this season], so I thought the college experience was going to be different,\u201d the Massachusetts native says from one of the few chain restaurants open on Sundays in town. \u201cIn the back of my mind, it was like, Do I want to be historic and bring this team to a place they\u2019ve never been? Or do I, I don\u2019t want to say be another guy, but if I went to another school [which] had numerous top picks, you would just fall into certain categories.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-7\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"6l\">\u201cIt was unique to me, and I\u2019ve been taking the unique route my whole life.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-8\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"6o\">That\u2019s one way of describing a grand basketball experiment with few parallels in modern college sports: A Catholic kid from outside of Boston playing at a Mormon school in a state with one of the lowest percentages of Black residents in the country.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-11\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"6y\">It\u2019s not often a top prospect like Dybantsa winds up going all-in, as he has, on BYU\u2014a place that is donned in blue but far from the blueblood programs that he considered like Kansas or North Carolina.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-12\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"71\">BYU, too, is all in on Dybantsa, the No. 1 prospect of the 2025 class. He\u2019s known for his 7-foot wingspan, his elusiveness with the ball, the way he dominates in transition and how he shines offensively in the midrange. He arrived in Provo thanks to the confluence of the school\u2019s move to the hard-nosed Big 12; a shifting landscape for player compensation that makes such avenues appealing; and an energetic coach whose experience courtside in the NBA has carried over to the program he runs in college.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-13\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"74\">\u201cAJ is not in this for the money, he\u2019s in it because he loves basketball,\u201d says Cougars coach Kevin Young, a former 76ers and Suns assistant. \u201cI think people oftentimes don\u2019t understand that, not just with AJ but in general. Athletes are athletes because they love the sport they play. That\u2019s why they got into it in the first place. The money follows because you\u2019re good enough and people are going to pay you what you\u2019re worth. It doesn\u2019t faze him, because that\u2019s not why he does this.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-14\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"77\">The insistence that money isn\u2019t everything is the external narrative that Dybantsa pushes back at most. He doesn\u2019t touch his earnings, which are being carefully managed behind the scenes by his dad, and still relies mostly on an allowance from his parents that is not much more than what his two sisters receive (Dybantsa is the middle of three kids). He is completely unassuming, aside from the 6&#8242; 9&#8243; frame that sticks out even in the school-issued sweatshirt and flip-flops that are de rigueur on campus as he shuffles between classes, the BYU practice facility and a nearby apartment complex he shares with teammates.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-15\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"7a\">Further proof he\u2019s unassuming: He tools around the sleepy, wide-open streets of Provo not in a Mercedes-Benz G-Wagon, but rather in a disproportionately small Audi sedan, which the 19-year-old only started driving after recently getting his license.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-16\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"7d\">\u201cIt had nothing to do with money. There\u2019s all this, \u2018Well, BYU gave him the bag.\u2019 Puh-lease,\u201d remarks AJ\u2019s father, Anicet \u201cAce\u201d Dybantsa, who is thankful that the large Uber bills he was footing and his own chauffeuring duties have subsided in tandem this winter. \u201cWe told all seven [finalists], \u2018This is the minimum wage that we\u2019re asking. If you don\u2019t have it, we are not going to even bother coming to your school or wasting your time or our time.\u2019 All seven said they had it, a couple schools had more. We never told [AJ] how much we were asking because we didn\u2019t want money to influence his decision.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-17\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"7g\">\u201cBYU knows they got him at a good deal.\u201d\u00a0<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/images2.minutemediacdn.com\/image\/upload\/c_crop,x_0,y_0,w_0,h_0\/c_fill,w_16,ar_16:9,f_auto,q_auto,g_auto\/images\/voltaxMediaLibrary\/mmsport\/si\/01khpwtb7yesptmxt7q9.jpg\" alt=\"AJ and Ace Dybantsa pose for a photo.\" title=\"AJ and Ace Dybantsa pose for a photo.\" width=\"0\" class=\"undefined w-full w-full blur-[5px]\" q:id=\"7q\"\/><\/p>\n<p>\u201cI know why my wife [wanted] me to go to Utah\u2014to protect him. My son is not for sale,\u201d says Ace, AJ Dybantsa\u2019s father. | Phillip Istomin\/Sports Illustrated<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-19\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"7u\">Ace delivers this with a half-smirk and never directly addresses reports that such a figure hovered around $5 million from the school and local boosters for this season. Nor does he have to in an age when such compensation remains closely guarded by all involved. And there\u2019s plenty more coming in the door, thanks to endorsement deals with Nike, Red Bull and others signed even before the family arrived in town.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-20\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"7x\">Early in the recruitment process, Dybantsa didn\u2019t have the school on his short list of potential destinations. He whittled down the contenders to those one might expect of a kid who was named his home state\u2019s Gatorade Player of the Year as a ninth-grader. But BYU kept popping up when evaluating the pillars, as he termed them, that he was looking for in a program: a winning team, a family atmosphere and top-notch NBA development.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-21\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"80\">All three seemed to click into place after Young was hired in April 2024. A number of NBA players vouched for what the coach would implement at the school. After Dybantsa\u2019s family was able to visit campus to see for themselves what things were like\u2014they all moved to Provo to be with AJ this season\u2014it wasn\u2019t a difficult decision at all to commit to the Cougars.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-22\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"83\">Says Dybantsa: \u201cNo knock to the coaches and the schools that recruited me, they\u2019re some of the top colleges that have produced NBA players. I just think it\u2019s different coming from an NBA assistant coach where he\u2019s actually worked with the players one-onone while they were high-level players, while they were All-Stars. It\u2019s different than just getting a guy to the NBA.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-23\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"86\">Young understands better than most the jump players must make between the college game and the pros. The 44-year-old has risen from running a team in the G League to becoming the NBA\u2019s highest-paid assistant with the Suns to now leading a team perched firmly within the AP Top 25. Last season Young\u2019s BYU roster featured Nets rookie Egor Demin, the No. 8 pick in the 2025 draft.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/images2.minutemediacdn.com\/image\/upload\/c_crop,x_0,y_0,w_0,h_0\/c_fill,w_16,ar_16:9,f_auto,q_auto,g_auto\/images\/voltaxMediaLibrary\/mmsport\/si\/01khpx43hbdn8x8wbfh0.jpg\" alt=\"AJ Dybantsa sits on a basketball posing for a photo.\" title=\"AJ Dybantsa sits on a basketball posing for a photo.\" width=\"0\" class=\"undefined w-full w-full blur-[5px]\" q:id=\"8g\"\/><\/p>\n<p>AJ Dybantsa, who wears No. 3, wants to become BYU\u2019s third Hall of Famer and is projected to be a top-three pick in the 2026 NBA draft. | Phillip Istomin\/Sports Illustrated<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-25\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8k\">\u201cLet me be clear, I think AJ\u2019s the\u2014and this is no disrespect to anybody else in the draft class\u2014stone-cold No. 1 pick,\u201d says Young, with the same matter-of-fact tone he\u2019d use to deliver an injury update. \u201cHaving just come from the NBA, those are the types of guys that every team wants because of his versatility and his size. I think it\u2019d be very, very hard to pass on him and there\u2019s still so much untapped potential in there as well.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-26\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8n\">Things are trending that way. Through 25 games, Dybantsa is leading the nation in scoring while having fueled BYU to its fourth-longest winning streak (13 games) in program history. He notched the second 30\/10\/10 triple-double in Big 12 conference history in just his 13th collegiate game, against Eastern Washington. He also broke the Cougars\u2019 freshman single-game scoring record with 43 points against Utah in a Holy War win.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-27\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8q\">What has most surprised those around the program is not Dybantsa\u2019s ability with the ball, but rather his hunger at layering on elements to his game with each passing day. In the early nonconference slate, the forward was constantly rerouted by defenses when attacking the lane by double teams and high presses, sometimes defaulting to isolated post touches if the Cougars were corralled into the half court. Young says when it comes to grasping concepts or corrections and quickly putting them into practice, Dybantsa is one of the best he\u2019s ever seen. That has shown up at the onset of league play as the freshman has made quicker decisions around the rim and increased the number of assists he\u2019s dishing out.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-28\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8t\">\u201cI was fortunate enough to coach Anthony Edwards at Georgia and I played with Kobe Bryant [in AAU],\u201d Cougars assistant coach John Linehan says. \u201cI\u2019ve seen kind of a blueprint of what great players look like and it\u2019s all about the approach and mindset coming into the game. Some of these one-and-done guys can come in with the mindset of, \u2018I\u2019ve arrived, I don\u2019t really have to work hard because I\u2019m a top-three pick.\u2019 But do you want to be great? For AJ, he not only wants to get there, but be great when he gets there.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-29\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"8w\">Associate head coach Tim Fanning, who previously worked with Overtime Elite and coached overseas, says he\u2019s noticed Dybantsa\u2019s desire to constantly improve. \u201cThat\u2019s reared its head for AJ this year in a lot of ways, like in his defense and his rebounding,\u201d Fanning says. \u201cHe\u2019s more consistently getting deflections. He\u2019s more consistently taking away the strength of the opponent, he\u2019s more consistently challenging shots. Those are the things we\u2019re talking about all the time with him.\u201d<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/images2.minutemediacdn.com\/image\/upload\/c_crop,x_0,y_0,w_0,h_0\/c_fill,w_16,ar_16:9,f_auto,q_auto,g_auto\/images\/voltaxMediaLibrary\/mmsport\/si\/01khpxcq1fszy6x7xjwb.jpg\" alt=\"BYU forward AJ Dybantsa dribbles the ball against Arizona State earlier this season.\" title=\"BYU forward AJ Dybantsa dribbles the ball against Arizona State earlier this season.\" width=\"0\" class=\"undefined w-full w-full blur-[5px]\" q:id=\"96\"\/><\/p>\n<p>BYU forward AJ Dybantsa leads the nation at 24.4 points per game. | Erick W. Rasco\/Sports Illustrated<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-31\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"9a\">That thirst for improvement is not new. It\u2019s an oft-repeated tale (mostly by Ace to the eye rolls of a son who has heard the story far too frequently) that a Spider-Man basket bought for 5-year-old AJ\u2019s room sparked his interest in the game. But it was actually the absence of hoops in a gym during the pandemic that lit AJ\u2019s quest to refine a craft that, up until then, had mostly just come naturally.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-32\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"9d\">In search of competition and seeking the next steps in AJ\u2019s basketball evolution, father and son decided to look beyond AJ\u2019s all-boys Catholic private school, St. Sebastian\u2019s in suburban Needham, Mass. They took trips to places as far away as Newport, R.I., where he\u2019d play against older kids. Recruiting services began to label him as one of the top players in his class, and eventually the family arranged a move to Napa, Calif., so AJ could join the elite Prolific Prep academy, which has produced more than a dozen McDonald\u2019s All-Americans in recent years.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-33\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"9g\">Playing a national schedule featuring several other top prospects, Dybantsa\u2019s profile, and his game, flourished even further. Offers from nearly every power-conference program rolled in, as did workouts with the likes of LeBron James, Chris Paul and Dybantsa\u2019s idol, Kevin Durant. Hakeem Olajuwon prodded AJ to rebound more after watching him play at a tournament in Memphis. Coaches, scouts and agents beckoned constantly, eventually leading to another transfer\u2014this time to an ambitious startup school, Utah Prep Academy in Hurricane, Utah. Not long after, BYU began to step up its interest.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-35\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"9m\">Unlike the first move, however, AJ did not make it alone. \u201cI have access to social media and see all the stuff they\u2019re offering him. Agents throwing money, cars,\u201d says Ace. \u201cI\u2019m reading the messages and I know why my wife [Chelsea] wants me to go to Utah\u2014to protect him. I was a cop, I was making good money. My wife works [in medical insurance], she\u2019s making good money. So money was not an issue to us. I learned one thing in life, if someone gave you a million dollars, they can make $10 million behind you. I\u2019m from Africa, but I didn\u2019t come to America by boat. My son is not for sale. I\u2019m not for sale.\u201d So in 2024 Ace turned in his retirement papers and moved to Utah with AJ.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-36\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"9p\">AJ has enjoyed some of the perks that come with being a top prospect nowadays, which have included playing hoops for Utah Prep in China to watching the NBA\u2019s Global Games in Paris. A product of the social media age, Dybantsa has seen his Instagram following balloon to more than 800,000 followers along the way, and he\u2019s intent on building up his YouTube audience as well.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-37\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"9s\">Those are all side projects in the grand scheme of things, though. When the trips are over and the phone is put away, what remains far more top of mind for Dybantsa is the reason he\u2019s at BYU in the first place: to cram both undergraduate and master\u2019s levels of his basketball education into this 2025\u201326 season.<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-38\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"9v\">\u201cWhen you talk about player development, you think about some coach going out there with a bunch of cones and yelling, \u2018You\u2019re doing this, you\u2019re doing that!\u2019 But I think it\u2019s, Can you put players in a position to be successful and show them how they\u2019re going to be efficient?\u201d says Young. \u201cIt\u2019s spacing, it\u2019s decision making, that\u2019s how we try to develop guys. AJ has been unbelievable because you can tell him something one time and he can figure out how to go out there and do it.\u201d<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-39\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"9y\">That\u2019s been playing out so far, as Dybantsa powered the Cougars with only one nonconference loss\u2014to UConn by a basket in November at TD Garden, an unfortunate result in a Boston-area homecoming despite his game-high 25-point performance. He scored at least 20 points and shot over 50% from the field over the course of nine consecutive games at one point too, the first time any Division I freshman had done so in the past three decades.<\/p>\n<p><img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/images2.minutemediacdn.com\/image\/upload\/c_crop,x_0,y_0,w_0,h_0\/c_fill,w_16,ar_16:9,f_auto,q_auto,g_auto\/images\/voltaxMediaLibrary\/mmsport\/si\/01khpxge69qa86beg5pm.jpg\" alt=\"BYU forward AJ Dybantsa shoots a jumper against UConn at TD Garden in Boston on Nov. 15, 2025. \" title=\"BYU forward AJ Dybantsa shoots a jumper against UConn at TD Garden in Boston on Nov. 15, 2025. \" width=\"0\" class=\"undefined w-full w-full blur-[5px]\" q:id=\"a8\"\/><\/p>\n<p>BYU forward AJ Dybantsa shoots a jumper against UConn at TD Garden in Boston on Nov. 15, 2025. He scored 25 points, but the Cougars lost. | Barry Chin\/The Boston Globe via Getty Images<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-41\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"ac\"><a href=\"https:\/\/www.si.com\/nba\/2026-nba-draft-big-board-50-top-players-to-watch-for-fans-of-tanking-teams\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Most mock drafts place him somewhere in the top three picks<\/a>, along with <a href=\"https:\/\/www.si.com\/college-basketball\/ranking-the-top-10-mens-college-hoops-freshmen-surprise-addition-to-top-five\" rel=\"nofollow noopener\" target=\"_blank\">Cameron Boozer of Duke and Darryn Peterson of Kansas<\/a>, depending on the results of the lottery. But Dybantsa insists he does not view himself as being a one-and-done. That\u2019s a decision to make after the season, which he confidently thinks won\u2019t be until sometime in April.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-42\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"af\">When the time does come, could he shock the basketball world again and remain at BYU, running it back to polish his game even further in a place few expected him to go? Dybantsa has already taken a different path to the highest levels of the sport once, so what\u2019s another?<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-43\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"ai\">Dybantsa emphasizes that he\u2019ll only make the leap to the NBA when he thinks he\u2019s ready. He doesn\u2019t want to just play; he wants to do so for a long time at an All-Star level.\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-44\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"al\">\u201cHe can play everywhere on the floor. He\u2019s like a blank canvas of where his game is going to go, it\u2019s just like he\u2019s painting, trying different things on it, and he\u2019s great at everything,\u201d says Linehan. \u201cHis ceiling\u2019s through the roof.\u201d\u00a0<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-45\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"ao\">Or, the Cougars hope, in the rafters.<\/p>\n<p>More College Basketball from Sports Illustrated<\/p>\n<p id=\"inline-text-48\" class=\"my-[18px] [&amp;_a]:text-primary my-f-1.5\" q:key=\"0\" q:id=\"aw\">Listen to SI\u2019s college sports podcast, Others Receiving Votes, below or on <a href=\"https:\/\/podcasts.apple.com\/us\/podcast\/others-receiving-votes\/id1834741833\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" target=\"_blank\">Apple<\/a> and <a href=\"https:\/\/open.spotify.com\/show\/7Arsw6ozKQIPm7ep9jLvao\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" target=\"_blank\">Spotify<\/a>. Watch the show on <a href=\"https:\/\/www.youtube.com\/@SportsIllustrated\/videos\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer nofollow\" target=\"_blank\">SI\u2019s YouTube channel<\/a>.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"High up in the rafters of the Marriott Center is a large, empty space between a pair of&hellip;\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":611316,"comment_status":"","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[5],"tags":[7,6,12],"class_list":{"0":"post-611315","1":"post","2":"type-post","3":"status-publish","4":"format-standard","5":"has-post-thumbnail","7":"category-nba-draft","8":"tag-basketball","9":"tag-nba","10":"tag-nba-draft"},"share_on_mastodon":{"url":"https:\/\/channels.im\/@nba\/116096581214995255","error":""},"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nba\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/611315","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nba\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nba\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nba\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nba\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=611315"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nba\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/611315\/revisions"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nba\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/611316"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nba\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=611315"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nba\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=611315"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.rawchili.com\/nba\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=611315"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}