2026 NBA Draft Winners and Losers With Joe House and J. Kyle Mann

2026 NBA Draft Winners and Losers With Joe House and J. Kyle Mann

The 2026 NBA Draft was so boringly competent that nobody could give any team a D or F grade — and that's the most surprising thing about it.

Jun 24, 2026 1:59:03 Difficulty: Intermediate Played

TL;DR

Bill Simmons, Joe House, and J. Kyle Mann break down the 2026 NBA Draft live on Netflix, declaring overall "competence" the biggest winner as teams avoided the wild swings of drafts past [1]. Washington takes AJ DeBonza first overall while controversially signing Trae Young to a $212M deal the same week [2]. Utah lands Darren Peterson at 2, Memphis gets Boozer at 3, and Chicago's Caleb Wilson pick stands out as a potential franchise-changer [3]. The single most useful takeaway: the era of teams making boneheaded lottery picks is effectively over — the nerds have won.

#NBA Draft 2026 #draft grades #Wizards rebuild #Utah Jazz contention #Trae Young contract #Giannis trade #Sacramento Kings guard #Darren Peterson red flags #Boozer Memphis fit #Caleb Wilson Bulls #World Cup 2026 #Keaton Waggler Clippers #draft analytics era #playoff profile players #Jaden Quaintance defense #AJ DeBonza #Darren Peterson #Boozer #Washington Wizards #Utah Jazz #Trae Young #Darius Acuff #Caleb Wilson #Sacramento Kings #Memphis Grizzlies #Chicago Bulls #Keaton Waggler #FIFA World Cup 2026

Bill Simmons, Joe House, and J. Kyle Mann go live on Netflix to react to the 2026 NBA first-round draft picks and discuss the winners and losers.

Chapter list
  • The episode opens with back-to-back sponsor reads for PNC Bank and PayPal before Bill Simmons jumps in to frame the broadcast. He's doing this live on Netflix for what he cheerfully describes as his favorite day of the year — the NBA Draft. Joe House is introduced as the deliriously happy Wizards fan whose team just took AJ DeBonza at #1, and J. Kyle Mann from The Ringer is alongside as the resident draft expert. Simmons briefly previews upcoming Rewatchables content and explains the Netflix live polling gimmick borrowed from Star Search.

  • Simmons opens the conversation by noting that the first 12 picks were universally the right calls — there were no Kendrick Browns, no baffling reaches. Mann agrees the 'good old boy network' front office is nearly extinct, replaced by data-driven decision-making that makes it nearly impossible to give any team a D or F grade. The Celtics pick at 27 is revealed live — a Houston forward named Sanak who Mann tepidly endorses for his size and athleticism while noting real developmental question marks on offense. House, drunk on happiness if not alcohol, cheerfully defends the Kings staying disciplined enough to simply take who made sense for them — a Vivek-restrained miracle.

  • The panel wraps with final grades and closing thoughts. Simmons gives the 2026 draft an A for talent — all three top picks were legitimate A+ selections, and the quality held up deeper than most years — but only a C- for entertainment, since the whole thing was just too competent and predictable. House's parting wish is for a new generation Running Diary writer who can make the savage observations about family dynamics, living-room sets, and draft night spectacle that the Ringer principals can no longer make on air. Mann reflects on the historic nature of a draft where all three top teams could legitimately come away satisfied — no clear hierarchy. Simmons closes on a note of genuine warmth and public health: he's getting a colonoscopy on Thursday and encourages everyone to take care of themselves. A new Rewatchables episode — The Good Son — drops Thursday. He'll be back Sunday unless a Jaylen Brown trade breaks, at which point, drugs or no drugs, he's going live.

Paint touches
A statistical metric counting how many times per game a player receives the ball inside the painted area near the basket; used as a proxy for downhill scoring aggressiveness.
Stretch 4
A power forward (the 4 position) who can shoot three-pointers, pulling the defense out of the paint and creating spacing; contrasted with traditional, rim-centric power forwards.
Rookie contract
The standard 4-year contract NBA first-round picks sign upon being drafted, featuring fixed salaries set by the CBA; teams maintain cost-controlled rights during this period.
Play-in tournament
An NBA postseason format where teams seeded 7th through 10th in each conference compete for the final two playoff spots in a mini-tournament after the regular season.
Bird rights
A CBA provision allowing teams to re-sign their own free agents for more money than the salary cap would otherwise permit; named after Larry Bird.
Good stats, bad team guy
A player who accumulates impressive individual numbers on a losing team, often indicating they are a volume scorer rather than an efficient winner-elevating player.
Micro-discectomy
A minimally invasive spine surgery to remove a herniated disc fragment that presses on a nerve; referenced in the context of Michael Porter Jr.'s injury history.
Ball screen
An offensive action where a player sets a screen on a defender while the ball-handler uses it to create separation; fundamental to modern NBA pick-and-roll offense.
Pick-and-roll
A two-man offensive play where one player sets a screen (picks) for the ball-handler and then rolls toward the basket; the most common action in modern basketball.
Upside pick
A draft selection of a player with high theoretical potential but unproven or inconsistent production, prioritizing ceiling over floor.
Neapolitan
In the context of the episode, used metaphorically to describe the top-3 draft picks as offering equally appealing but distinct flavors — like Neapolitan ice cream with its three distinct flavors side-by-side.
Tanking
The strategy of deliberately fielding a weak team to lose games and improve lottery odds for a higher draft pick; a controversial but widely practiced approach in the NBA.
Lottery
The weighted random drawing that determines the draft order for the top picks among the NBA's worst teams; having 'lottery picks' means selections in the top 14.
Spoon-fed offense
When a player requires plays to be specifically designed for them rather than being able to create offense independently; indicates limited self-creation ability.
Jitterbug
Informal basketball term for an extremely quick, elusive guard who is difficult to contain; used here to describe Ibuka Okorie's playing style.
Purgatory
Used figuratively in the episode to describe a player's offensive game being stuck in an undefined, unproductive state — neither a reliable interior scorer nor an effective perimeter shooter.
Running Diary
A Bill Simmons writing format: a real-time, annotated log of observations written while watching a live event, popularized on ESPN's Page 2 and Grantland.
Organizational mouthwash
A phrase coined in the episode meaning a fresh, palate-cleansing addition that washes away a franchise's previous bad taste — a player who resets the culture or narrative around a team.

Chapter 2 · 01:15

NBA draft reactions

Simmons opens the conversation by noting that the first 12 picks were universally the right calls — there were no Kendrick Browns, no baffling reaches. Mann agrees the 'good old boy network' front office is nearly extinct, replaced by data-driven decision-making that makes it nearly impossible to give any team a D or F grade. The Celtics pick at 27 is revealed live — a Houston forward named Sanak who Mann tepidly endorses for his size and athleticism while noting real developmental question marks on offense. House, drunk on happiness if not alcohol, cheerfully defends the Kings staying disciplined enough to simply take who made sense for them — a Vivek-restrained miracle.

Chapter 3 · 06:59

Winners and losers of the first round

The panel wraps with final grades and closing thoughts. Simmons gives the 2026 draft an A for talent — all three top picks were legitimate A+ selections, and the quality held up deeper than most years — but only a C- for entertainment, since the whole thing was just too competent and predictable. House's parting wish is for a new generation Running Diary writer who can make the savage observations about family dynamics, living-room sets, and draft night spectacle that the Ringer principals can no longer make on air. Mann reflects on the historic nature of a draft where all three top teams could legitimately come away satisfied — no clear hierarchy. Simmons closes on a note of genuine warmth and public health: he's getting a colonoscopy on Thursday and encourages everyone to take care of themselves. A new Rewatchables episode — The Good Son — drops Thursday. He'll be back Sunday unless a Jaylen Brown trade breaks, at which point, drugs or no drugs, he's going live.

Claims made here

Among Division I college basketball players who averaged over 20 paint touches per game this season, AJ DeBonza ranked 3rd in downhill paint-touch scoring efficiency.

J. Kyle Mann no source cited

The Washington Wizards signed Trae Young to a 4-year, $212 million contract with a player option in year 4.

Bill Simmons no source cited

Trae Young has shot in the low 30s from three-point range for three consecutive seasons.

Bill Simmons no source cited

Milwaukee Bucks stretched Damian Lillard's contract for $22 million per year through the rest of the decade before trading Giannis.

Bill Simmons no source cited

87% of the live Netflix audience voted that Giannis will not make the NBA Finals with the Miami Heat.

Bill Simmons no source cited

Darius Acuff shot 44% from three-point range as a college freshman.

Joe House no source cited

54% of the live Netflix audience voted Darius Acuff as the most fun Sacramento Kings rookie ever.

Bill Simmons no source cited

Team USA has not been considered a legitimate deep World Cup contender since 2010 — the first time since Donovan's goal against Algeria.

Bill Simmons no source cited

A record number of African nations — approximately five — made the final 32 of FIFA World Cup 2026, with the previous record being three.

Bill Simmons no source cited

Keaton Waggler shot 40% on pull-up threes in pick-and-roll situations in college at high volume.

J. Kyle Mann no source cited

Bennett Sturtz played over 1,300 minutes in college, an almost unprecedented workload.

Bill Simmons no source cited

67% of live Netflix viewers preferred Derrick Queen over Kingston Flemings in a head-to-head poll about the Pelicans-Hawks trade.

Bill Simmons no source cited

In the high school recruiting rankings for the 2026 draft class, AJ DeBonza was #1, Peterson #2, and Boozer #3 — matching the actual draft order.

Bill Simmons no source cited

Sports
Keaton Waggler: Could He Be Shay Gilgeous-Alexander?

2026 NBA Draft Winners and Losers With Joe House and J. Kyl… · Jun 24, 2026 Sports

After a 46-point game versus Purdue and 40% pull-up threes in pick-and-roll, Waggler walks into LA. Simmons compares the trajectory to Shay Gilgeous-Alexander at Kentucky — the pieces are visible even if the MVP version isn't. Kyle Mann says the upside past pick 5 basically narrows to 2 or 3 guys, and Waggler is one of them.

Sports
Data point #1

2026 NBA Draft Winners and Losers With Joe House and J. Kyl… · Jun 24, 2026

In the high school recruiting rankings for the DeBonza class, AJ DeBonza was ranked #1, followed by Darren Peterson at #2 and Boozer at #3 — matching the first three picks of the 2026 NBA Draft exactly.

No indexed bits in this chapter.

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Claims & Sources

0 / 13 cited (0%)

Factual claims made this episode, and whether a source was named.

Among Division I college basketball players who averaged over 20 paint touches per game this season, AJ DeBonza ranked 3rd in downhill paint-touch scoring efficiency.

J. Kyle Mann no source cited

The Washington Wizards signed Trae Young to a 4-year, $212 million contract with a player option in year 4.

Bill Simmons no source cited

Trae Young has shot in the low 30s from three-point range for three consecutive seasons.

Bill Simmons no source cited

Milwaukee Bucks stretched Damian Lillard's contract for $22 million per year through the rest of the decade before trading Giannis.

Bill Simmons no source cited

87% of the live Netflix audience voted that Giannis will not make the NBA Finals with the Miami Heat.

Bill Simmons no source cited

Keaton Waggler shot 40% on pull-up threes in pick-and-roll situations in college at high volume.

J. Kyle Mann no source cited

Darius Acuff shot 44% from three-point range as a college freshman.

Joe House no source cited

Bennett Sturtz played over 1,300 minutes in college, an almost unprecedented workload.

Bill Simmons no source cited

In the high school recruiting rankings for the 2026 draft class, AJ DeBonza was #1, Peterson #2, and Boozer #3 — matching the actual draft order.

Bill Simmons no source cited

67% of live Netflix viewers preferred Derrick Queen over Kingston Flemings in a head-to-head poll about the Pelicans-Hawks trade.

Bill Simmons no source cited

54% of the live Netflix audience voted Darius Acuff as the most fun Sacramento Kings rookie ever.

Bill Simmons no source cited

Team USA has not been considered a legitimate deep World Cup contender since 2010 — the first time since Donovan's goal against Algeria.

Bill Simmons no source cited

A record number of African nations — approximately five — made the final 32 of FIFA World Cup 2026, with the previous record being three.

Bill Simmons no source cited