Washington selected BYU forward AJ Dybantsa with the first overall pick in the 2026 NBA Draft, signing him to a standard rookie-scale deal valued at $69M over four years with team options. The selection closes a collegiate chapter in which Dybantsa accumulated $4.2M in NIL compensation across one season in Provo, a figure that now serves as the high-water mark for basketball prospects navigating the post-*Alston* landscape.
Dybantsa committed to BYU in April 2025 after a protracted recruitment that included site visits to Kansas, North Carolina, and Alabama. His NIL portfolio—stitched together by Excel Sports Management and BYU's collective infrastructure—included endorsements with a regional banking chain, a Salt Lake City-based athletic recovery brand, and a licensing arrangement with Panini that paid $1.8M for trading card rights before he played a college game. He appeared in 32 games for the Cougars, averaging 21.3 points and 7.1 rebounds, then declared for the draft in March with two years of eligibility remaining.
The Wizards enter year three of a teardown that has yielded cap space, draft capital, and little else. Dybantsa joins a roster with $41M in committed salary for 2026-27, leaving room for a second max-level addition in free agency. Washington's front office, led by president Michael Winger, has openly discussed pairing the pick with a veteran acquisition before training camp. The franchise has not won a playoff series since 2017 and has not sold out Capital One Arena for a non-opening-night game since January 2024. Dybantsa's signing gives the team its first marquee asset since the Bradley Beal trade to Phoenix netted draft picks in 2023.
The $4.2M NIL figure—confirmed by Excel Sports and reported by *The Athletic*—resets baseline expectations for top-tier recruits. It eclipses the $3.1M that Duke's Cooper Flagg earned in 2024-25 and the $2.9M that Kansas guard Cayden Boozer collected the same year. The number also creates a new negotiating floor for high school players weighing college against G League Ignite alternatives or international routes. BYU's collective, funded by a mix of local donors and corporate partners, moved aggressively to land Dybantsa after missing on five-star recruits in prior cycles. The school's administration has not disclosed whether the NIL investment generated measurable ROI in ticket sales, merchandise, or donor engagement, but two people familiar with the arrangement said the collective views the expense as "brand-building" rather than cash-flow positive.
Washington's rebuild now hinges on whether Dybantsa's skill set—a 6'9" forward with perimeter shooting and defensive versatility—translates at NBA spacing and speed. The front office has committed to surrounding him with shooters and declined to guarantee minutes to veterans on non-guaranteed deals. The Wizards hold the No. 18 pick in the second round, which multiple league sources expect them to package with future draft capital for a rotation wing before the August moratorium lifts.
Dybantsa's rookie deal includes a 120% raise in year two and a $19M team option in year four, standard terms for a No. 1 pick under the current CBA. Excel Sports has already fielded inquiries from footwear brands for a signature shoe deal, which would layer on top of the NBA salary and position Dybantsa for nine-figure career earnings if he hits performance benchmarks. The Wizards open training camp in late September and play their first regular-season game on October 21 at home against Miami.