CHICAGO (AP) — The Indiana Pacers were hoping for a top-four selection in the NBA draft. They missed getting there by one spot.
That means they got nothing.
The ping-pong balls of the NBA draft lottery came out in such a way Sunday that Indiana would have had the No. 5 pick in next month's draft — but that pick will instead go to the Los Angeles Clippers as part of the trade that brought center Ivica Zubac to the Pacers earlier this year.
Pacers President of Basketball Operations Kevin Pritchard did nothing to hide how disappointed he was about the latest batch of bad luck for a franchise that played in Game 7 of the NBA Finals last season, lost star Tyrese Haliburton to a torn Achilles tendon in that game — he missed this entire season — and has had nothing to celebrate since.
The team with the second-worst record in the NBA this season, after being the second-best team last season, just got dealt another loss.
“I’m really sorry to all our fans,” Pritchard wrote on X, the social media site formerly known as Twitter, after the lottery. “I own taking this risk. Surprised it came up 5th after this year. I thought we were due some luck. But please remember — this team deserved a starting center to compete with the best teams next year. We have always been resilient.”
It was the second known apology Pritchard made after the lottery to the Pacers’ fanbase; the first was during an in-person interview session with Indianapolis media shortly after the results were revealed.
“I know the Twitterverse is probably going to be a little brutal. And I get it, man, I get it," Pritchard told reporters. "My heart was beating like it was Game 7. And to those people, I’m sorry. But I can promise you, at the end of the day, we're going to be an organization that figures it out. We’re very resourceful.”
The terms of the Zubac deal were this: The Pacers got him from the Clippers for Bennedict Mathurin and Isaiah Jackson, plus two future first-round picks — one in 2029 and one in 2031, unless Indiana's first-round pick happened to fall between No. 5 and No. 9 this year.
Turns out, the Pacers couldn't fall below No. 6. That means picks 1, 2, 3 or 4 would stay with Indiana, and pick 5 or 6 would go to the Clippers.
And to the Clippers it goes — in a loaded draft, no less.
“Zu is a great fit for us," Pritchard said of the center who averaged 14.1 points and 10.6 rebounds this season. "And at the end of the day, this is what is really important: I felt like (to be a) championship team, we needed to fill that starting center. That was priority one, because they’ve earned the right to go try to get a championship. And that was not doable with protecting this to eight or nine to 10 or wherever.”
For now, the Pacers don't have any picks in either the first or second round in the June 23-24 draft.
“I just want to tell the fans we’re going to be OK," Pritchard said. "We’re going to compete at the highest level. We get Ty back. ... And what we’ve learned from Zu so far is he’s super smart and he wants to fit in and he’s all about winning. But again, disappointed. I'm not trying to smooth over that. We wanted the pick. But we'll be OK."
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People attend the NBA basketball draft lottery in Chicago, Sunday, May 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)
CHICAGO (AP) — For Michael Winger, 1 was the loneliest number. And for the Washington Wizards, it was the best ping-pong ball.
Let's explain: Winger, the president of Monumental Basketball, was the Wizards' representative inside the sequestered room where the NBA draft lottery was taking place Sunday. The first ball was 4, the second ball was 2.
“I knew it was us,” Winger said.
He was right. The third ball — 1 — made it official. The fourth ball was a 13, which meant nothing. The 4-2-1 combination ensured that the Wizards had won the lottery and earned the right to pick No. 1 in next month's draft, a huge step forward for a team that finished with the league's worst record this season. And for the next 45 minutes, before the rest of the world found out during a television broadcast, Winger was essentially stone-faced.
“I could have celebrated by myself, looking around for somebody to high-five,” Winger said. “There wouldn't have been anybody there.”
The celebrations came later. Winger, Wizards great John Wall, vice president of player personnel Travis Schlenk, coach Brian Keefe and assistant coach David Vanterpool posed on stage after the lottery ended, all smiles. There haven't been a lot of moments worth smiling about in Wizards-land over the last three years. That may be changing.
“It’s our fans that have endured the most," Winger said. "And to me, this No. 1 pick is for them. It's a reward for hanging in there with us. It’s a reward to continue to support us despite sometimes really bad basketball. They knew and they supported a multiyear teardown, a multiyear reinvention of the franchise.”
It will be Washington's first time with the No. 1 pick since they chose Wall in that spot in 2010. Wall was the Wizards’ on-stage representative for the lottery.
“They could be a team that I feel should be in playoff contention next year,” Wall said.
Washington had a 14% chance of winning the No. 1 pick, tied with Brooklyn and Indiana for the best odds. The Wizards had basically a 50-50 chance of getting either a top-four pick or the No. 5 spot.
But three consecutive years of losing — the three worst seasons in the franchise’s 65-year history — paid off for a team that went 17-65 this season and even allowed Miami’s Bam Adebayo to score 83 points for the league’s second-highest single-game total ever.
The Wizards swung deals to land All-Stars Trae Young and Anthony Davis earlier this year, and now they can add whichever college player they want.
“This is another step in our journey," Keefe said. "Obviously, it’s a great day and we’re looking forward to going through the process and finding who we’re going to take with that pick, but I’m just thrilled for everybody that works with the organization and most importantly the community.”
Winger brought a photo of his family with him into the lottery room, perhaps the bit of luck he needed. And there is a certain symmetry to how the 4-2-1 combination was what delivered for the Wizards; those numbers add up to 7.
“The day I was born,” said Keefe, born April 7, 1976.
Utah will pick No. 2, Memphis will pick No. 3 and Chicago will pick No. 4.
The Los Angeles Clippers got the fifth pick — via a trade with the Pacers, who were shut out of the draft entirely — followed by No. 6 Brooklyn, No. 7 Sacramento, No. 8 Atlanta, No. 9 Dallas, No. 10 Milwaukee, No. 11 Golden State, No. 12 Oklahoma City, No. 13 Miami and No. 14 Charlotte.
The draft begins June 23 in New York. The draft combine in Chicago starts on Monday.
There are four candidates that generally are considered front-runners to be the No. 1 pick, all coming out of college after one year.
— BYU’s AJ Dybantsa, who led the nation in scoring at 25.5 points per game.
— Duke’s Cameron Boozer, the AP player of the year who averaged 22.5 points and 10.1 rebounds.
— Kansas’ Darryn Peterson, who averaged 20.2 points in 24 games.
— North Carolina’s Caleb Wilson, who averaged 19.8 points and 9.4 rebounds on 58% shooting.
“Obviously we’re going to find out on June 23 where I’m going to land," Dybantsa said. "I’m betting on myself to be a No. 1 pick. I think I’m very adaptable, I can play anywhere.”
It's now possible that Boozer could be selected by the Bulls or the Jazz — two teams that his father, Carlos Boozer, played for in his NBA days.
“It could be surreal, for sure," Cameron Boozer said.
This was the eighth, and likely final, year of this version of an NBA draft lottery, with the worst teams having a 14% chance of winning.
Framework fell into place last month on changes meant to further discourage tanking, and the league’s Board of Governors is expected to ratify that plan in the next few weeks — with general managers meeting in Chicago on Tuesday to discuss them presumably for one last time.
The three worst teams, starting next season, would have a 5.4% chance of winning — with the next seven teams all having an 8.1% chance of winning. The lottery would grow from 14 to 16 teams if the plan, as expected, is approved.
AP Sports Writer Andrew Seligman and freelance reporter Scott Held contributed to this report.
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BYU forward AJ Dybantsa smiles as he talks to media during the NBA basketball draft lottery in Chicago, Sunday, May 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)
NBA Deputy Commissioner Mark Tatum announces that the Washington Wizards won the first pick in the NBA basketball draft lottery in Chicago, Sunday, May 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)
Washington Wizards' John Wall, left, and NBA Deputy Commissioner Mark Tatum, pose for photos after Tatum announced that the Wizards had won the first pick in the NBA basketball draft lottery in Chicago, Sunday, May 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)
A person walks by a sign in the NBA basketball draft lottery in Chicago, Sunday, May 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)
A person walks by a sign in the NBA basketball draft lottery in Chicago, Sunday, May 10, 2026. (AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh)