A lottery pick and a fading asset class: what the Wizards' Dybantsa gamble says about the NBA's next economics
The Wizards used the No. 1 pick on a 19-year-old one-and-done from BYU. The more interesting story is the league's new media-rights arithmetic and what it means for the small-market franchises still waiting to be bought.

On Wednesday morning in New York, the Washington Wizards called AJ Dybantsa's name first. The 6ft 8in (2.03m) forward, 19, spent one season at Brigham Young University and now carries the weight of a franchise that has not won a playoff series in nearly a decade. The draft itself was over in roughly 40 minutes; the questions it leaves behind will take considerably longer to settle.
The Wizards' selection is the easy part of the story. The harder part is what the draft tells us about the league's economic plumbing at the moment the new national media-rights package is bedding in, regional sports networks are still licking their wounds, and a handful of mid-sized franchises are quietly on the market.
The pick, on the merits
Dybantsa arrives in Washington as a wing who reads the game older than his age. He averaged better than 20 points as a BYU freshman, showed positional versatility in pre-draft workouts, and tested well at the combine. By reputation he is the closest thing to a franchise-changing wing the draft offered in 2026. On the merits, the Wizards took the player most outlets had them taking.
The framing is more revealing than the pick. Washington finished near the bottom of the Eastern Conference standings, won the lottery, and selected the consensus top prospect. By the standards of recent drafts, that is a clean outcome. The complications are downstream.
The economics nobody on camera is talking about
Two things are happening in NBA finance that the broadcast will not explain. First, the league's new national media-rights deal — agreed in 2024 and phasing in across the 2025-26 and 2026-27 seasons — has materially raised per-team media distributions. Second, the regional sports network crisis of 2023-25 has not resolved so much as rearranged itself. Bally Sports' successor arrangements, the rebranding of the YES Network's distribution fights, and the slow migration of carriage to direct-to-consumer platforms have left several franchises in a less stable local-revenue posture than the national numbers suggest.
The result is a wider gap between haves and have-nots inside the league's 30 ownership groups. A team like the Golden State Warriors, sitting on a new arena revenue stream and a national following, can absorb a developmental rookie season. A team like Washington, whose local ratings and arena economics have lagged for years, cannot hide a lottery pick behind a contending roster. The Dybantsa selection is therefore not just a basketball decision; it is a bet that the team's owner will underwrite a multi-year rebuild while the new media-rights windfall shores up the cap sheet.
What this means for the franchises quietly on the block
Several ownership situations remain unresolved in mid-2026. The league has been waiting on a sale in Minnesota, a long-running process in Memphis, and rumours around a minority-stake reshuffle in Portland. The pattern is familiar: when a league signs a major media-rights uplift, the value of a franchise re-rates upward, and the holdout sellers get a clearer path to a price. The Dybantsa draft does not change that calculus directly, but it is a useful reminder that the league's underlying asset — a long-term claim on live sports inventory that cable and streaming both still need — has rarely been more valuable in nominal terms.
For Washington specifically, the bet is that a 19-year-old wing in a major media market becomes the kind of national-attention asset that justifies both the rebuild and the eventual resale of the team, if current ownership ever chooses to test that market.
The counter-read
The skeptical take is that a single draft pick does not move franchise economics. Lottery picks bust at non-trivial rates, even the obvious ones. The Wizards' cap sheet, injury history, and front-office continuity are larger determinants of whether Dybantsa becomes a building block or another data point in a long rebuild. The media-rights story is real, but it is a league-wide tailwind, not a Washington-specific fix.
The honest answer is that both stories are running at once. The league is getting richer in aggregate even as its individual franchises grow more divergent. Wednesday's draft is the headline; the divergent trajectory is the trend.
This publication frames the 2026 draft through the league's new economics rather than the on-court scouting report — a less photogenic angle than the one most wires led with, and arguably the more durable one.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- http://reut.rs/3QVmS7k
- http://reut.rs/3QVmS7k