The Athletic has live coverage of the 2026 NBA Draft.The Utah Jazz selected Darryn Peterson with the No. 2 pick Tuesday in the NBA Draft.Peterson spent one season at Kansas, playing in 24 games and averaging 20.2 points, 4.2 rebounds and 1.6 assists per game. In high school, he showed he was a strong ballhandler who counters defenders well with his herky-jerky actions. He can not only keep his dribble alive, but also threaten defenses with his creativity out of ball screens.At the NBA combine, he measured at 6 feet 4.5 without shoes, with a wingspan of 6 feet 9 3/4 inches and an 8-foot-7 standing reach. He plays with strength and physicality and has a powerful, skinny frame that looks like it will continue to fill out in the next three years.Sam Vecenie’s draft guide summaryWhy Darryn Peterson's best basketball is still ahead of himSam VeceniePeterson was as complete a guard as I’ve evaluated entering college basketball in a long while. He’s an aggressive shot hunter on the court, and I love the way he went about improving his passing ability out of ball screens. Until this season at Kansas, he had never stagnated, continually working his way up a steady trajectory to the top of his recruiting class.But then he plateaued with the Jayhawks, and there is a case that he took a step back in some respects — especially as a passer and playmaker. How much of it was because of injury? How much of it was because of the situation around him at Kansas? How much of it was because college basketball was harder than high school? Peterson’s performance raised questions, especially in regard to his decision-making and ability to consistently get paint touches. However, it’s possible these issues will go away once he gets into an NBA offensive scheme.I’m buying into what I saw from Peterson in high school. It’s exceptionally hard to find players who are this creative, who can make shots at this level at such a young age and who have at least demonstrated the ability to pass and defend at some point, even if those skills have been inconsistent. Yes, there are questions that Peterson needs to answer for NBA teams. But the talent is the talent, and Peterson projects to be the kind of player who can dribble, pass, shoot, defend and think the game at a high level, as long as his development goes well over the next two years.John Hollinger’s analysisPeterson came into the year as the No. 1 player on most draft boards, but his injury-riddled season at Kansas left a lot of questions. In particular, the minutes he played didn’t really showcase him as a lead creator despite a high scoring rate. His stat line is more of an elite 3-and-D guy, which obviously still has value, but that would be a slightly disappointing outcome this high in the draft.The most notable stat for Peterson is 9.9 field goal attempts for every assist in Big 12 play, which isn’t quite in Cam Thomas territory but definitely isn’t good for a guard prospect. You can only blame him playing off-ball for some of that; most of the other elite wing prospects from recent years averaged between 4 and 7 shots per assist. Even Dybantsa, who wasn’t exactly nicknamed the Human Assist, was at 5 shots per assist.
Darryn Peterson selected by the Utah Jazz with the No. 2 pick in the 2026 NBA Draft
Peterson will join a young core in Salt Lake City.












