Draft Notes: Clingan, Risers, Buzelis, Withdrawals
The “buzz and excitement” surrounding former UConn center Donovan Clingan seems to be growing, Jonathan Wasserman of Bleacher Report writes in a post-combine update of his 2024 mock draft. Wasserman had Clingan coming off the board at No. 7 overall in a mock earlier this month, but has bumped the big man up to No. 3 this week after he made a strong impression on NBA evaluators in Chicago.
Zaccharie Risacher (No. 2 to No. 1), Dalton Knecht (No. 10 to No. 7), Tidjane Salaun (No. 21 to No. 12), and Devin Carter (No. 18 to No. 13) are among the other notable lottery risers in Wasserman’s latest mock draft, while Matas Buzelis slipped from No. 5 to No. 11. Opinions are mixed on the G League Ignite forward, according to Wasserman, who says workouts with teams will be “extra important” for Buzelis.
Here are a few more draft updates:
- Guard Xavier DuSell, who declared for the draft following his senior year at Fresno State, has decided to remove his name from the 2024 poll and take advantage of his extra year of eligibility, tweets Jon Rothstein of CBS Sports. DuSell will be transferring to Nevada for his super-senior season.
- Following a strong freshman season at Georgia Tech (12.4 PPG, 8.2 RPG, 1.1 BPG), forward Baye Ndongo will withdraw from the draft and return to the Yellow Jackets, per Rothstein (Twitter link).
- Jacksonville guard Robert McCray will head back to school for his junior season rather than keeping his name in the draft, tweets Rothstein. McCoy had a breakout season in 2023/24, averaging 18.4 PPG, 4.2 RPG, and 2.9 APG.
- Guard Keyshawn Hall is pulling out of the draft and will transfer to his third college in three years, according to Rothstein (Twitter link). After playing at UNLV as a freshman and George Mason as a sophomore, Hall will head to UCF for his junior season in 2024/25.
- VCU sophomore forward Toibu Lawal has officially withdrawn from the draft and will transfer to Virginia Tech for his junior year, tweets Rothstein.
- As a reminder, the deadline for college early entrants to exit the draft pool and retain their NCAA eligibility is next Wednesday, May 29.
Draft Notes: Two-Day Format, Sandfort, Penda, Early Entrants
The NBA will hold a two-day draft for the first time this year, but the concept has been batted around for over a decade, according to Jeremy Woo of ESPN, who hears from a team source that a group executives first presented the idea to the league in 2011. Extending the second round to give teams more than two minutes per pick was one important reason for the change, as Woo details.
“Way more second-round picks would be traded every year, except (due to the lack of time between picks) no one knows who has them,” one Eastern Conference executive told Woo. “A team makes a trade, then another trade. I’m spending 10 minutes hunting down picks, and by the time you find out where it is, it’s too late to make a deal.”
“… The second round is not fun. Chaos. Insanity. Not how we should be running our business. This will solve that. We didn’t need a second day, we just needed a longer second round — but I understand we can’t start at 3 p.m. or finish at 3 a.m., so this is a good solution.”
The second round of the draft will get its own day this June and there will be four minutes per pick instead of two. The hope is that, in addition to giving front offices more time to consider their options – including potential deals – the second night of the draft will allow the league’s broadcast partners to better spotlight the 28 players being selected in round two.
“The second round has become more and more important,” NBA head of basketball operations Joe Dumars told ESPN. “Rosters have expanded, and you’re seeing a larger influx of talent into the league, a lot of times from the second round. (The one-day format) was not doing justice for the second-round picks and the teams.”
While it remains to be seen exactly how adding an extra day to the draft may change teams’ strategies, sources who spoke to Woo suggested they wouldn’t be surprised if there’s more action than usual during the final few picks of the first round – as teams look to land players before rivals get a chance to reset their boards – and the first few picks of the second round, after clubs have had 24 hours to consider their options.
Here’s more on the NBA draft:
- Following a breakout junior season, Iowa wing Payton Sandfort announced (via Instagram) that he’ll enter his name in the 2024 NBA draft while maintaining his NCAA eligibility. Sandfort, the No. 35 prospect on ESPN’s big board, averaged 16.4 PPG and 6.6 RPG with a .446/.379/.911 shooting line in 34 games in 2023/24.
- Jon Chepkevich of DraftExpress has put together a running list of early entrants for the 2024 NBA draft at RookieScale.com. We’re maintaining our own early entrant list, which can be found right here.
- One of the most recent additions to the early entrant list is 6’8″ French forward Noah Penda, who has submitted his paperwork to enter the draft, according to Chepkevich (Twitter link). The 19-year-old has played a key role this season for Vichy-Clermont in France’s Pro B league, Chepkevich notes.
- The following college players were recently reported to be testing the NBA draft waters or announced themselves that they plan to test the waters. Unless otherwise indicated, these players also entered the NCAA transfer portal:
- Marchelus Avery, F, UCF (senior) (Twitter link)
- Dion Brown, G, UMBC (sophomore) (Twitter link via Jon Chepkevich of DraftExpress)
- Xavier DuSell, G, Fresno State (senior) (Instagram link)
- Elijah Fisher, G, DePaul (sophomore) (Twitter link via Derek Murray)
- Vladislav Goldin, C, Florida Atlantic (senior) (Instagram link)
- Ben Humrichous, F, Evansville (senior) (Twitter link)
- Andrej Jakimovski, F, Washington State (senior) (Twitter link)
- Kobe Johnson, G/F, USC (junior) (Twitter link)
- Scotty Middleton, G/F, Ohio State (freshman) (Twitter link)
- Noah Reynolds, G, Green Bay (junior) (Twitter link)
- Jahmyl Telfort, G/F, Butler (senior) (Instagram link)
- Note: Not in transfer portal.
- Saint Thomas, F, Northern Colorado (junior) (Twitter link via Mike Sautter of Hurrdat Sports)
- Aboubacar Traore, G/F, Long Beach State (junior) (Twitter link via Sam Kayser of 24/7 High School Hoops)
