Washington selected BYU's AJ Dybantsa with the first overall pick Tuesday night, converting the most lucrative college NIL arrangement in basketball history into a projected $69M rookie-scale contract over four years. The Wizards get the 6'9" forward who spent one season in Provo playing in front of 14,000 fans per game while earning $4.2M from a collective backed by Utah-based tech executives and LDS family offices.
Dybantsa averaged 24.7 points and 8.3 rebounds across 32 games, leading BYU to a 27-5 record and a Sweet Sixteen exit. His NIL deal—structured as appearance fees, digital content rights, and quarterly bonuses tied to academic benchmarks—paid out in full by April. The arrangement allowed him to turn down G League Ignite's standing offer and stay in a system where Kevin Young's offense gave him 22 touches per game and freedom to audition NBA skill sets without developmental-league anonymity.
The selection matters less for Washington's rebuild timeline than for what it confirms about college basketball's place in the draft pipeline. Dybantsa chose BYU over traditional powers because the NIL economics were cleaner and the rotation guaranteed. He left school with more cash in hand than most second-round picks earn in two seasons, better film for front offices, and a March platform that G League showcase games cannot replicate. His agent, Mike George of Rogue Sports, spent the predraft process walking teams through the NIL deal's structure to prove the money came with no NBA contractual entanglements.
Washington's front office, led by president Michael Winger, now builds around a player whose college season doubled as a fully funded audition. The Wizards have $48M in cap space this summer and no All-Stars under contract past 2027. Dybantsa's rookie deal costs $12.2M in year one, rising to $20.8M by the fourth-year option. The team is expected to add a veteran point guard in free agency and will spend the next six weeks negotiating shoe deals for Dybantsa, whose BYU contract barred him from signing with footwear brands until after the draft.
NIL collectives in Austin, Lexington, and Durham have spent the week calling the law firms that structured Dybantsa's BYU arrangement. The model—pay enough to keep a top-five recruit on campus, let him develop against college competition, avoid the injury risk and media fatigue of a G League season—now has a first overall pick as proof of concept. Expect bidding for the 2027 class to start at $5M for players with lottery grades.
Washington holds a press conference Thursday at 11am Eastern. Dybantsa's first contract negotiation begins Friday, when Nike, Adidas, and New Balance submit term sheets for a shoe deal expected to land between $8M and $12M annually over five years.