Rockets take Jack Kayil at 39; Bulls pick Braden Smith at 38 in late first-round of NBA Draft
Houston closed the late first round by selecting Jack Kayil 39th overall, minutes after Chicago grabbed Braden Smith at 38 in a draft that has tilted heavily toward frontcourt help.

Houston took Jack Kayil with the 39th pick of the 2026 NBA Draft on 25 June 2026, capping a late-first-round swing toward perimeter scoring that the league's official broadcast feed announced at 01:06 UTC. The pick arrived one minute after the Chicago Bulls used the 38th selection on Braden Smith, the playmaking guard out of Purdue who spent the prior two seasons as one of college basketball's most efficient distributors. The back-to-back selections, both confirmed via the NBA Live Telegram channel during ESPN's primetime broadcast, are the smallest pieces of a draft that has so far been defined by a defensive frontcourt rush — but the final third of the first round, as it trickled into the early hours of Thursday, tilted back toward guards who can create their own shot.
What those two picks actually say about the teams making them is more interesting than the order they were taken in. Both Chicago and Houston spent the regular season as the league's two most lottery-adjacent teams, neither a credible playoff threat and both openly committed to a long-cycle teardown. Selecting a 38th- and 39th-overall guard, then, is a bet that the second apron of the draft is where rotation pieces actually live, and that neither front office wants to waste a developmental year on a project big who will not see the floor.
Chicago's late-first reset
Braden Smith was, by the metrics the public scouting services publish, the second-best pure passer in the college game. He led Purdue in assists in each of the past two seasons, played his 2025-26 year at 6'1" with a 6'4" wingspan, and entered the process as a probable second-rounder whose stock was depressed by his size and the usual questions about his ability to defend NBA-level athletes. The Bulls' decision to use pick 38 on him is a low-risk swing: Chicago's front office, now in its second off-season under the current front-office structure, has been signalling since the trade deadline that it would rather accumulate guard depth than reach for a centre. The 38th pick carries no protected-rookie-scale commitment that would crimp cap flexibility next summer, and Smith is the kind of player who, on a losing roster, can lose games by himself in November and then be the league's most efficient backup lead guard by February.
The reading the league's analytics crowd pushed on broadcast was that Chicago is essentially converting dead cap space into a developmental lottery ticket. The counter-reading, which some rival scouts flagged, is that Smith is simply not big enough to stay in front of NBA twos, and that the Bulls are collecting guards because they could not get a wing they liked at 38. Both readings are defensible; the next nine months of his Las Vegas Summer League run will do most of the work of deciding which is right.
Houston's Kayil and the second-apron arithmetic
Jack Kayil, taken 39th, is a more complicated fit. He is a 6'5" wing with a scoring reputation, drafted into a Rockets frontcourt rotation that already includes several players owed money on the rookie scale. Houston is operating against the second apron, which under the league's most recent collective-bargaining agreement restricts a team's ability to use portions of the mid-level exception, aggregate salaries in trades, and take back cash in deals. That makes the second round, for a team in Houston's cap tier, a place to take swings on rotation players on cheap contracts rather than stash-and-wait projects.
The 39th pick matters here precisely because of what the second apron does to a team like Houston. The roster is already expensive. The only way to add a 22- or 23-year-old who can contribute in a playoff series is to take him on a rookie deal. Kayil, depending on how the Rockets' summer-league coaches deploy him, is either a two-guard rotation piece or a G-League pass-through who gets bought out in January. The two outcomes are not symmetric — the second one costs the franchise almost nothing, the first one saves the front office the trouble of solving the same problem in free agency for three times the price.
What the late first round signals
The cumulative pattern of the late first round — wings, guards, more wings, more guards, with the occasional centre thrown in to keep the analysts honest — is not an accident. The top of this draft was unusually top-heavy at the four and five, with the consensus tier-one prospects all 6'9" or taller. By the time the league reached the 30s, the supply of usable bigs had dried up, and the teams picking were not in a position to take a swing on an international stash who would not arrive for two seasons. The market cleared, predictably, on guards who can play now.
There is also a quieter structural read. The second apron has, over the past two seasons, made the middle of the first round the most economically interesting real estate in the draft. Picks 20-40 are now the band where win-now teams take the rotation pieces they used to chase in free agency, and where lottery teams take the swing players they used to take in the second round. Picks 38 and 39 are at the exact intersection of those two logics, which is why two front offices with very different timelines spent them in essentially the same way.
What remains to be seen
The thread of the broadcast that the NBA Live channel posted at 01:00 and 01:06 UTC does not include the rationale from either team's war room, so any reading of the picks that depends on inside-the-room intent is speculation. The contracts will not be finalised until 1 July at the earliest, and Summer League rosters will not be set until after the holiday. The fairest assessment at 01:10 UTC on 25 June 2026 is that Chicago added a low-cost playmaker and Houston added a low-cost scorer, and that the league's most cap-strapped teams once again treated the late first round as their primary off-season market.
Desk note: Monexus treated picks 38 and 39 as cap-arithmetic events first and roster moves second; the wire broadcasts led with the names, the cap ledger tells the longer story.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/NBALive/1
- https://t.me/NBALive/2